CORAL

small, sedentary marine animal, related to the sea anemone but characterized by a skeleton of horny or calcareous material. The skeleton itself is also called coral. Although most corals form colonies by budding, there are some solitary corals; in both types the individual animals, called polyps, resemble the sea anemone in form.

Corals grow in both warm and temperate climates, but they are most abundant in warm, shallow water; over 200 coral species are found in the Great Barrier Reef of Australia. In many shallow-water species the polyps contain unicellular plants, which may provide the high oxygen concentration required by such corals.

Stony Corals

In the large group known as stony corals, or true corals (Madreporaria), each polyp secretes a cup-shaped skeleton, the theca, around itself. Some solitary corals of that group may reach a diameter of 10 in. (25 cm); in the colonial forms the individual polyps are usually under 1 / 8 in. (3 mm) long, but the colonies may be enormous. The body of each polyp is saclike, consisting of a wall of jellylike material surrounding a digestive cavity, with a single opening, the mouth, at the unattached end. The mouth is surrounded by tentacles used to capture small prey and is invaginated to form a pharynx leading into the body cavity. Thin sheets of tissue (mesentaries) extend radially from the wall to the pharynx, dividing the cavity. A second set of radial divisions is created by folds (septa) of the outer skeleton and body wall, which extend upward from the floor of the body cavity. Reproduction occurs both sexually and by budding. Sexual reproduction is by means of eggs and sperm, which are produced in the mesentaries and shed into the water. Fertilization results in a free-swimming larva, which attaches to a surface and secretes a skeleton, becoming (in colonial forms) the parent of a new colony.

As new polyps are produced by budding they remain attached to each other by thin sheets of living tissue as well as by newly secreted skeletal material. The great variety in the form of various colonial corals, which may be treelike and branching, or rounded and compact, depends chiefly on the method of budding of the particular species. In the brain corals, for example, each theca merges with the one next to it on either side, forming long rows of polyps separated by deep channels. In some of the branching corals the polyps occupy small, discrete pits on the surface of the skeleton. As a colonial coral produces more polyps the lower members die and new layers are built up on the old skeleton, forming a large mass. In tropical and subtropical regions these massive corals, along with other plants and animals, may form a coral reef. Most of the reef-forming corals belong to the stony coral group.

Soft Corals

The soft corals (Alcyonaria) are a group of soft, often feathery forms, with skeletons composed of calcareous or horny particles imbedded in the body wall. Each polyp of a soft coral has eight tentacles. Among the well-known soft corals are the sea pen, sea pansy, whip coral, and organpipe coral. The precious red coral (Corallium) of the Mediterranean Sea, used for jewelry, also belongs to that group. The spicules of its skeleton are fused together.

Classification

Stony and soft corals are classified in the phylum Cnidaria, class Anthozoa.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Coral Reefs
 

books on: Coral  - 8245 results

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...VISEAN, D, AND NAMURIAN, E OF SCOTLAND Stratigraphic section and coral zones Hill, 1938-1940 Calciferous sandstone series at base Ca . Coral zone 1, D1 and S2D1; coral zone 2 = D2; coral zone 3, part = upper Calciferous; Lower limestone...
...item in jewellery imports from India, and coral took first place in exports to the East...Mediterranean was the only source of red coral, the kind needed for the Indian market...Leghorn, Genoa, and Naples were centres of coral fishing and coral industries. Most of...
...very beautiful. I have no doubt that the Coral Island on which you were wrecked was one...volcanic in their nature, neither are they of coral formation. Those of the third class are...numerous. "As to the manner in which coral islands and reefs are formed, there are...
...Spirobranchus tricornis, GROWING IN CORAL, SHOWING MOTHER- OF-PEARL TRAP-DOORS, READY TO BE CLOSED DOWN 44 CORAL REEF, THREE FATHOMS DOWN, SHOWING CORALS AND GORGONIAS Enlargement of cinema film. 45 CORAL REEF, FOUR FATHOMS DOWN, WITH...
...This was not so much the sharp poisonous coral reefs a scratch was a certain infection...everywhere and disguised themselves as coral. The shells of the old ones--and some...eighteen inches across, encrusted with coral and even cemented to the rocks they had...
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journal articles on: Coral  - 1543 results

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...hundred known species of hard coral. (23) Hard corals extract calcium from the...events and the resulting coral bleaching, corals face other challenges in...See id. (discussing coral traders claims that the corals they shipped were "live...
...Heterospecific competition of corals with algae reduces coral growth and survivorship 9,10. In corals, spatial arrangement...between Macroalgae and Corals: Effects of Herbivore...Increased Algal Biomass on Coral Survivorship and Growth...
...publishing. THE NATURE OF THE CORAL REEF What is the coral reef, and why is that ecosystem important to us? Corals evolved more than 500 million...and recycling system. Corals are both hard and soft. Each coral polyp contains photosynthetic...
A Coral Reef as an Analogical Model to Promote Collaborative...used a naturally-occurring ecosystem, a coral reef, together with scientific biographical...the students were given a collage of a coral reef. Following the same protocol, students...
She Called Her Coral Because It Was a perfect pink day: The Neglecting of Coral Suzanne Dickerson. by Darren J Foster Summer arrived...actions. This article, through the case study of Coral Suzanne, the eldest of the Dickerson children...
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magazine articles on: Coral  - 2966 results

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...sunlight reaching the coral colonies. (Though corals are animals, they...expelled from the coral polyps, leaving...white. Bleached corals cannot lay down calcium...necessarily a dead coral, however, and corals have been known to...
...increased temperatures and coral bleaching.2 Additionally, corals decline and seaweeds...10 " thus preventing coral recovery. Corals are foundation species...suppress recruitment of coral larvae, but also damage older corals. The general consensus...
...temperature, in which corals expel energy-producing symbiotic algae. Coral can survive bleaching...banned the trading of coral skeletons and stony corals because of excess harvest...international trade in corals and coral reef species is contributing...
...level stands of corals or plagues of coral-eating predators...bleaching may be the way corals adapt to warmer...The outlook for coral reefs is made more...to rebuild larger corals and missing sections...reef. Thus, most coral reefs could begin...
Monitoring Coral Reefs from Space. by Brian Soliday The latest advances...lending an enormous boost to the study and protection of coral reef ecosystems. When most people think of coral reefs, they envision unique types of fish, lobsters...
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...what gives corals their lsquo;color rsquo; because save for certain species like organ pipe coral, blue coral, sun coral and some others, most corals are white, rdquo; Yan said. ldquo;When water temperatures rise, most corals react by expelling...
Coral Reef Fish Research; New Approach Considers Protection...Fishing Interests. RESEARCHERS at Australias leading coral reef research centre have developed a way to protect both coral reef fish and the interests of fishers. In pioneering...
Special Garden under the Sea; Coral Reef 50m off Pt Vernon. Byline: Carlie...Coast councillor Sue Brooks. The dazzling coral reef at Point Vernon, about 50m out from...given a grant last year to monitor the coral for signs of disease and bleaching. During...
Guidebook on Coral Reef Protection Launched. Local government...the Philippines, which encompasses the Coral Triangle Region, known as the worlds center...and Timor-Leste. Dr. Perry Alino, coral reef and ecology expert of the University...
...to the fringing coral reef on the eastern...Point Vernon. Soft corals were the most significantly...life, with soft coral diversity and abundance...rivalling that of hard corals. All soft corals at the reef are...species of hard coral have survived...
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encyclopedia articles on: Coral  - 136 results

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...The skeleton itself is also called coral. Although most corals form colonies by budding, there are...coral reef . Most of the reef-forming corals belong to the stony coral group. Soft Corals The soft corals (Alcyonaria) are a...
CORAL REEFS limestone...organisms are stony corals , colonial cnidarians...degrees Celsius). Corals are not the only...usually called a coral reef. Geologically...outward growth of corals that became established...outward growth of coral. Where entire...
CORAL SNAKE name for poisonous New World snakes...found in the United States. The Eastern coral snake ( Micrurus fulvius ), or harlequin...black rings only. The Sonoran, or Western, coral snake ( Micruroides euryxanthus ) is a rather...
CORAL GABLES city (1990 pop. 40,091), Miami...at the height of the Florida land boom, Coral Gables is a noted planned city, with tree...promoted tourism. The Univ. of Miami is in Coral Gables...
CORAL SPRINGS city (1990 pop. 79,443), Broward co., SE Fla.; inc. 1963...along with the southern Florida and Fort Lauderdale area. The population of Coral Springs nearly doubled between 1980 and 1990...
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