Proliferating anemones, with & without babies! Aren’t the baby anemones the cutest things you’ve ever seen? What good mamas
Epiactis lisbethae
Salt Creek, WA (August 2019, March 2017, March 2019, August 2019)
seen from Japan

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from T1
seen from Singapore
seen from South Korea

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from Indonesia
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
Proliferating anemones, with & without babies! Aren’t the baby anemones the cutest things you’ve ever seen? What good mamas
Epiactis lisbethae
Salt Creek, WA (August 2019, March 2017, March 2019, August 2019)
I’ve been wanting to make my dive log more artistic for ages now (and actually keep up with it ofc) so I finally figured out how to use a photo editing application similar to photoshop. This is the first thing I made! It’s a collage of proliferating anemones I saw on a dive at Salt Creek. All of the anemones are edited in except the green one in the middle. Can’t wait to experiment more with this!
Proliferating Anemone and Aggregating Anemone by Taryn Gustafson
Epiactis prolifera, Anthopleura elegantissima
March 2019, Salt Creek Washington
Epiactis lisbethae (with babies!)
Salt Creek
March 2018
Check out this beautiful green proliferating anemone, Epiactis prolifera, I found while tide pooling at Larrabee state park near Bellingham, Washington. I saw several specimens but this one was my favorite because it had a few babies attached to the stalk. I often see these guys attached to floating pieces of eel grass (which was how I found this one!). If you’re tide pooling in the PNW, always make sure to check eel grass as they often will have nudibranchs, snails, skeleton shrimp or anemones attached to them.