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Corals

About Corals

Coral reefs are home to the greatest storehouses of biodiversity on Earth perhaps only rivalled by the tropical rainforests on land. They are also among the oldest ecosystems and although they cover only 1% of the Earth’s surface they are home to 25% of all marine fish species. Coral reefs are also the largest of Earth’s ecosystems yet each coral reef is the result of the building activities of tiny animals called polyps.

Coral polyps are soft-bodied organisms related to sea anemones and jellyfish. At their base is a calicle - a hard, protective limestone skeleton which forms the structure of coral reefs. Reefs begin when a polyp attaches itself to a rock on the sea floor, then divides, or buds, into thousands of clones. The polyp calicles connect to one another, creating a colony that acts as a single organism. As polyps die others grow over them. The reefs we see today are the result of this building process which has been going on for millennia. Some of the coral reefs we can still see today began growing over 50 million years ago.

Coral polyps themselves are colourless but the colours you see are from the presence in the corals of Zooxanthellae algae. This relationship is one of the natural world’s great symbiotic relationships. The algae get a stable home close enough to the surface to be able to photosynthesise - a process that itself produces nutrients for the coral polyps.

As well as receiving these nutrients from the Zooxanthellae coral polyps feed using nematocysts which are barbed stinging tentacles which can capture zooplankton and even small fish.

When stressed especially by rises in sea temperature polyps will expel their symbionts causing coral bleaching which can lead to the eventual death of the coral colony.

Coral reefs are under threat from pollution, rising seawater temperatures and acidification of the oceans. An estimated 25% of coral reefs have already disappeared and an estimated two-thirds of all coral reefs are at risk today. If the present rate of destruction continues, it’s feared that 70% of the world's coral reefs will be destroyed by the year 2050.

acropora table coral  p3260888
Acropora Table Coral P3260888
acropora table coral  p3281247
Acropora Table Coral P3281247
acropora table coral_pcf7410
Acropora Table Coral_pcf7410
anemone coral heliofungia actiniformis
Anemone Coral Heliofungia Actiniformis
bubble coral plerogyra sinuosa _pcf8032
Bubble Coral Plerogyra Sinuosa _pcf8032
bulb anemone entacmaea quadricolor pcf_7091
Bulb Anemone Entacmaea Quadricolor Pcf_7091
bulb anemone entacmaea quadricolor_pcf6369
Bulb Anemone Entacmaea Quadricolor_pcf6369
colonial anemone amphianthus sp_ pcf6893
Colonial Anemone Amphianthus Sp_ Pcf6893
giant barrel sponge _pcf8530
Giant Barrel Sponge _pcf8530
gorgonian
Gorgonian
orange cup coral leptopsammia pruvoti pcf_6951
Orange Cup Coral Leptopsammia Pruvoti Pcf_6951
orange cup coral leptopsammia pruvoti_pcf6929
Orange Cup Coral Leptopsammia Pruvoti_pcf6929
mushroom coral detail_pcf0119
Mushroom Coral Detail_pcf0119
red whip coral_pcf7673
Red Whip Coral_pcf7673
whip coral polyp detail_pcf9170
Whip Coral Polyp Detail_pcf9170