stony coral
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major reference
- In cnidarian: Size range and diversity of structure
…hydroids, hydrocorals, and soft and hard corals, however, proliferate asexually into colonies, which can attain much greater size and longevity than their component polyps. Certain tropical sea anemones (class Anthozoa) may be a metre in diameter, and some temperate ones are nearly that tall. Anthozoans are long-lived, both individually and…
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annotated classification
- In cnidarian: Annotated classification
Order Scleractinia (Madreporaria) True or stony corals. Mostly colonial; calcareous external skeleton; no basilar muscles or siphonoglyphs. Mostly tropical and subtropical. Order Zoanthinaria (Zoanthidea) Solitary, clonal, or colonial polyps resembling sea anemones. Lack skeleton but may incorporate debris into body wall, commonly epizoic. One complete and 1 incomplete mesentery per…
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aquatic ecosystems
- In marine ecosystem: Benthos
Reef-building coral polyps (Scleractinia) are organisms of the phylum Cnidaria that create a calcareous substrate upon which a diverse array of organisms live. Approximately 700 species of corals are found in the Pacific and Indian oceans and belong to genera such as Porites, Acropora, and Montipora. Some of…
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description
formation of coral reefs
- In coral reef: Corals and other reef-building organisms
Reef-building corals, chiefly the stony corals or Scleractinia, grow best in shallow sunlit water, between the low-water mark and a depth of 11 metres (36 feet), but they can still construct reefs in water as deep as 40 metres (about 130 feet), and they may have a sparse existence…
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