An anemone is a plant in the buttercup family, or a marine invertebrate, the sea anemone. There's no such thing as an "anenome", as my spell checker is telling me right now! It's just a common mispronunciation, often by people who should know better, including Monty Halls narrating his documentary about the Great Barrier Reef I've just been watching on BBC2.
A sea anemone is in the phylum "cnidaria"
The spelling is sea anemone, a marine polyp usually of limited mobility.
Nothing.
The sea anenome and the clown fish have a mutually beneficial symbiosis. The anenome provides protection for the clown fish and the clown fish helps feed the anenome by leaving nutrient-rich wastes.
what is a hydra
sponges have central cavity and sea anemone have gastravascular cavity
It is mutualism because the anemone wards off the clown fish's predators due to their poisonous tentacles, but at the same time the clown fish wards off anemone-eating fish, also ensuring the anemone's survival.
While Sea Anemone's appear slow, they are actually moving at a rate so fast it is not perceivable to the human eye.
I believe that you mean "anemone." The anemone is a type of flower that is usually small and modest. The sea anemone is a flower-like carnivorous creature that lives in the sea (obviously). It uses its stinging tentacles to catch prey. The sea anemone is usually anchored in one spot, and is known to have mutual relationships with animals such as clown fish.
the relationship is that the anemone is dangerous to other fish but the clown fish is immune to its shocks so the anemone houses the clown fish and it eats the clown fish's waste
the anenome offers protection for the clownfish and the clownfish feeds and cleans the anenome
Commensalism because the clownfish uses the sea anenome (which is un-affected) to lay their eggs in and to live in.