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Coral Reef

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  1. Coral Reef_book.pdf Coral Reef_book.pdf
 
I. What is a Coral Reef?
A. One of the most beautiful and fascinating natural environments; variety surpasses anything else the sea has to offer
1. 100's of different fishes, plants and inverts
2. multi-hued coral colonies branch in all directions
3. sponges, sea fans, and other strange animals adorn the reef surface, providing even greater color and variety
4. also outlandishly colored fishes drift and dart through the surrounding turquoise waters
B. Coral reefs are limestone structures formed by the skeletons of tiny sea- anemone-like animals and are the largest things on earth built by an organism
C. Distribution: found in tropical seas throughout the world
1. Indo-Pacific: enormous area spanning SE Asia through Polynesia and Australia, and East across Indian Ocean to Africa. By far the largest and richest in species.
 
I. What is a Polyp?
A. Polyps that are quite small (few exceed a pencil width in diameter). They are like small anemones that secrete a calcium carbonate base; tentacles are covered with nematocysts.
B. Polyps grow in groups called colonies
1. each succeeding generation builds its home upon the foundation of skeletons left by the last
2. colonies attach to other colonies
C. Growth factors: depth of water, amount of light, water movement, temperature and water clarity affect the way in which a coral colony
grows; corals are naturally long-lived but are intolerant of changes
1. corals require a water temperature of 22̊C (72̊F) or more so they
are only found in the tropics
2. reef-building corals are limited to growing no deeper than 50m (164') as they need sunlight
a. they need sunlight because within the living tissue of the polyp are tiny plant cells called zooxanthellae
b. causes tissue to look brownish
D. Zooxanthellae fix sugar (photosynthesis) and corals use it for nutrition
(up to 90% of energy used by coral comes from algae); deeper forms of
coral intake more plankton.
1. zooxanthellae receive nutrients and a place to live from the coral
2. so corals are a composite organism - part animal and part plant
E. Life history of coral polyps
1. Food: regularly feed on small creatures floating by, captured bysticky stinging tentacles.
a. feeding usually occurs at night as tentacles would be bittenoff by fish during the day; tentacles are withdrawn into the protection of a hard skeleton formed by the polyp (limestone).
b. digested food can go to their neighbors (which are clones) and is transported by cili
Author: Marilyn Knapp
Last modified: 6/27/2015 6:55 AM (EDT)