Upside down anemone

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My Chicago Sunburst BTA decided to flip itself to the underside of a rock where it is completely shaded.

Anemone has been in the tank for 4 months. Has done great until now. Stayed right where I put him until now.
He was about 6-7 inches deep in the tank a little off center from my G5 XR 15 blue lights. Lights run at 60% on Corallab AB+ setting.

Tank is almost year up and running. Waterbox Frag tank 4 ft long 72 gallons.

Fish:
2 ocellaris clowns
1 yellow tang
1 pseudochromis
1 diamond gobi
1 Lawnmower blenny
2 cleaner shrimp
Various snails and hermit crabs

I don't think any of the fish or inverts bother the anemone. Clownfish ignore it which is annoying. I haven't added any fish or inverts for 2 months.

Corals:
Large Pulsing xenia colony (this is very near the anemone but usually not touching. This gets trimmed back semiweekly)
1 small sinularis soft coral
1 Frogspawn
a few florida ricordia
A bunch of Zoanthids
1 small Acan
GSP colony
1 encrusting montipora coral

I recently added one mushroom and a few zooanthid polyps but these are not near the anemone.

Recently got an ICP test which is all within parameters I am looking for except iodine which was 10.79 microgram/L (reference value on ATI is 64.7). I dose BFRS 2 part to keep Alk 8-9 and Calc 430-440. pH varies 8.12-8.2 on my Apex. Phosphate is 0.01 mg/L, Nitrate 2.95 mg/L. My silica remover cartridge is depleted which I learned from the ICP testing of the RO/DI water, so a little has gone in while I await arrival of the new cartridge from spectrapure.

Original location (although he is quite a bit bigger now)
Right Arch.jpg


Upside down
Upside down anemone.jpg


Any thoughts? Anemone gets no direct light where it is now. The only thing I can think of is I let the xenia get to big and it was bothering the anemone or the silica is a problem. Or the stupid thing just decided to wander.
 
My Chicago Sunburst BTA decided to flip itself to the underside of a rock where it is completely shaded.

Anemone has been in the tank for 4 months. Has done great until now. Stayed right where I put him until now.
He was about 6-7 inches deep in the tank a little off center from my G5 XR 15 blue lights. Lights run at 60% on Corallab AB+ setting.

Tank is almost year up and running. Waterbox Frag tank 4 ft long 72 gallons.

Fish:
2 ocellaris clowns
1 yellow tang
1 pseudochromis
1 diamond gobi
1 Lawnmower blenny
2 cleaner shrimp
Various snails and hermit crabs

I don't think any of the fish or inverts bother the anemone. Clownfish ignore it which is annoying. I haven't added any fish or inverts for 2 months.

Corals:
Large Pulsing xenia colony (this is very near the anemone but usually not touching. This gets trimmed back semiweekly)
1 small sinularis soft coral
1 Frogspawn
a few florida ricordia
A bunch of Zoanthids
1 small Acan
GSP colony
1 encrusting montipora coral

I recently added one mushroom and a few zooanthid polyps but these are not near the anemone.

Recently got an ICP test which is all within parameters I am looking for except iodine which was 10.79 microgram/L (reference value on ATI is 64.7). I dose BFRS 2 part to keep Alk 8-9 and Calc 430-440. pH varies 8.12-8.2 on my Apex. Phosphate is 0.01 mg/L, Nitrate 2.95 mg/L. My silica remover cartridge is depleted which I learned from the ICP testing of the RO/DI water, so a little has gone in while I await arrival of the new cartridge from spectrapure.

Original location (although he is quite a bit bigger now)
Right Arch.jpg


Upside down
Upside down anemone.jpg


Any thoughts? Anemone gets no direct light where it is now. The only thing I can think of is I let the xenia get to big and it was bothering the anemone or the silica is a problem. Or the stupid thing just decided to wander.
Just let it be, she'll be moving up into the light again. Mine does this from time to time too.
 
Yuh, my bta liked doing that too. Does not enjoy direct light, even after 1 yearish.
Sorry. At least he's not hiding where you can't see him.
 

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