Coral
Coral, common name for members of a large class of marine invertebrates characterized by a protective calcium carbonate or horny skeleton. This protective skeleton is also called coral. Corals are divided into two subclasses, based on differences in their radial symmetry (symmetry around a central axis). One subclass consists of colonial, eight-tentacled animals, each with an internal skeleton. Among them are whip corals, gorgonians, and the red coral used in making jewelry. Members of the other subclass commonly have six tentacles, or multiples of six, but other patterns are also observed. They include the stony, or true, corals. Another class of the same phylum also contains forms known as coral that are not considered here.
STRUCTURE
True corals secrete calcium carbonate from the bottom half of the stalk of the individual animal, or polyp, forming skeletal cups to which the polyps are anchored and into which they withdraw for protection. In the flattened oral disc at the top of the stalk is an opening, edged with feathery tentacles and cilia, that is both mouth and anus. At night the tentacles extend from the cup, seize animal plankton that wash against them, and carry the food to the mouth. Stinging cells, or nematocysts, on the tentacles can also paralyze prey.
COLONIES
Some scleractinians exist as solitary polyps, but the majority are colonial. Colonial polyps average from 1 to 3 mm (0.04 to 0.12 in) in diameter. They are connected laterally by tubes that are an extension of the polyps' gastrovascular cavities, and the colony grows by asexual budding from the base or the oral disc of the polyps. Living polyps build on the deposits of their predecessors; the wide range of branched or massive forms that result depends on the species involved.
Colonial corals can grow in deep water, but reef-building corals are found only in warm, shallow seas. They live no deeper than light can penetrate because the symbiotic algae called zooxanthellae that live in their tissues require light for photosynthesis, and the corals cannot exist without the algae. Carbon is passed by the algae to the coral, increasing its energy, and the food caught by the coral may supply nitrogen and phosphorus for both organisms. The dependence of the corals on the algae probably varies according to species and locality. Scleractinian corals are the main contributors to a reef, but other organisms also add to it, such as hydrozoan corals, calcareous algae, mollusks, and sponges. See Coral Reef.
Scientific classification: Corals belong to the class Anthozoa in the phylum Cnidaria. Corals with eight tentacles make up the subclass Ostocorallia or Alcyonaria. Corals that commonly have six tentacles or multiples of six belong to the subclass Zoantharia (or Hexacorallia). Stony, or true, corals belong to the order Scleractinia (or Madreporaria).
STRUCTURE
True corals secrete calcium carbonate from the bottom half of the stalk of the individual animal, or polyp, forming skeletal cups to which the polyps are anchored and into which they withdraw for protection. In the flattened oral disc at the top of the stalk is an opening, edged with feathery tentacles and cilia, that is both mouth and anus. At night the tentacles extend from the cup, seize animal plankton that wash against them, and carry the food to the mouth. Stinging cells, or nematocysts, on the tentacles can also paralyze prey.
COLONIES
Some scleractinians exist as solitary polyps, but the majority are colonial. Colonial polyps average from 1 to 3 mm (0.04 to 0.12 in) in diameter. They are connected laterally by tubes that are an extension of the polyps' gastrovascular cavities, and the colony grows by asexual budding from the base or the oral disc of the polyps. Living polyps build on the deposits of their predecessors; the wide range of branched or massive forms that result depends on the species involved.
Colonial corals can grow in deep water, but reef-building corals are found only in warm, shallow seas. They live no deeper than light can penetrate because the symbiotic algae called zooxanthellae that live in their tissues require light for photosynthesis, and the corals cannot exist without the algae. Carbon is passed by the algae to the coral, increasing its energy, and the food caught by the coral may supply nitrogen and phosphorus for both organisms. The dependence of the corals on the algae probably varies according to species and locality. Scleractinian corals are the main contributors to a reef, but other organisms also add to it, such as hydrozoan corals, calcareous algae, mollusks, and sponges. See Coral Reef.
Scientific classification: Corals belong to the class Anthozoa in the phylum Cnidaria. Corals with eight tentacles make up the subclass Ostocorallia or Alcyonaria. Corals that commonly have six tentacles or multiples of six belong to the subclass Zoantharia (or Hexacorallia). Stony, or true, corals belong to the order Scleractinia (or Madreporaria).
Comments