I'll add some curveballs into this thread...I believe I'm the one "in the club" that chucker was referring to earlier.{My anemone is/was 30"down in the tank}. Although my rose anemone is a clone of another local reefer's, it is a different color than the parent anemone: A light hot pink color- some might call it "bleached." The other reefers in the club have much darker, and larger rose anemones- including the "parent" anemone of mine.
My rose clone initially settled at the bottom of my 220 gallon reef. Since I knew the coloration of the anemone it split from, I figured it was kind of bleached ... after all ,it was in a dealers tank with minimal PC lighting. It had split off in a reef with 175 watt/ VHO actinic lighting.
The rose anemone languished. That is, until I tossed in a tom
ato clownfish. It IMMEDIATELY took to the anemone, and we were "off to the races." The rose was blooming.
Leave it to the human to screw things up:
I traded some of my baby cardinalfish for another {reg} bubble-tip anemone. This anemone was a clone from a friends anemone that was housed in a VHO {only} lit tank. The "regular" BTA initially hid from the OBVIOUS increase in lighting. It finally did "come out" and split...it was doing MUCH too well! Got so huge it was killing SPS.
My tomato clownfish took to the regular BTA's. She totally abandoned the rose...and it AGAIN slowly started to "go downhill".
To make a long story short, I believe anemones do better with a host anemonefish present.
I do not believe an increase in lighting will "hurt" an anemone because they are VERY motile. They will shade themselves if it is too much lighting. I also believe the "rose" variety of BTA may be a little more sensitive to environmental conditions than the "standard" BTA.
The tomato clownfish still has not returned to my rose anemone.
She swam 6' down to the other end of the reef and kicked my spawning pair of ocellaris out of their large LTA! GO FIGURE!