LiveScience Image Gallery
Colorful Creations: Incredible Coral
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Pillar coral
A beautiful pillar coral located in the Florida Keys. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Florida Keys NMS
Soft corals
Often mistaken for plants, soft corals including the deep water sea fan (Iciligorgia schrammi), and the giant slit-pore sea rod (Plexaurella nutans), attach themselves to a hard substrate and slowly move with the natural wave action. Sponges like this orange elephant ear sponge (Agelas clathrodes) are water filters for the reef. They filter up to 30,000 times their body volume every day. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Moon Jellyfish
Shown above is a photograph of a moon jellyfish. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Soft coral
Soft coral with polyps extended. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Florida Keys NMS
Corals
Corals are large colonies of small animals called polyps. These polyps reside within a cup-like calcium carbonate skeleton. They have a central opening surrounded by tentacles which can be extended to feed on phytoplankton in the water column. Corals are a member of the phylum cnidaria, which also includes jellyfish and anemones. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Harold Hudson
Pillar coral
Pillar coral (Dendrogyra cylindrus), although beautiful, is rare in the Florida Keys. Pillar coral is unusual in that its polyps are usually extended. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Tongue Snail
Flamingo tongue snail on a sea fan close-up. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Staghorn coral
Close-up of staghorn coral with polyps extended. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Paige Gill - Florida Keys NMS
Elkhorn coral
Elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata) is a branching coral. Branching corals grow in the shallow areas of the reef crest and serve to break up the wave action as it comes onto the reef. The branches of Elkhorn coral resemble an elk's rack of antlers, thus its name. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Florida Keys NMS
Coral bleaching
Coral bleaching is a growing phenomenon for coral reefs globally. It is caused by the expulsion of the symbiotic algae, zooxanthelle, from the coral polyps. The zooxanthelle gives the coral its color and is also the source of most of the coral's nutrients. Coral can survive for a short time without the zooxanthelle, but if the algae remain expelled for an extended period of time, the coral will die. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Brain coral
A reticulated brittle star lies on the ridges of brain coral. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Flower coral
Beautiful Flower coral -- (Eusmilia fastigiata). Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Larry Zettwoch
Soft corals
In addition to the hard corals, there are a variety of soft corals like this common sea fan (Gorgonia ventalina). The calcium carbonate skeleton of soft corals is located within their bodies, allowing them to move with the wave action. Sea fans typically grow so that the wave action is moving over the broad plane of their bodies, so all of the sea fans in an area will be oriented in the same direction. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Elkhorn and clubtip finger coral
Elkhorn coral and a clubtip finger coral in the foreground. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: NOAA Photo Library
Star coral
In the photograph, a vase sponge with star coral inside. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Frank and Joyce Burek
Orange cup coral
Orange cup coral (Tubastraea coccinea) found in oil platforms. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: William Harrington
Star corals
Boulder and massive corals, like this boulder star coral (Montastrea annularis), are the "builders" of the reef. A coral head is a colony of small animals called polyps. Polyps the size of a pencil eraser build an external skeleton of calcium carbonate around their bodies. The walls of these skeletons form a rock-like structure. Over time, as new polyps build their skeletons on top of each other, a large coral head is formed. The boulder and massive coral skeletons develop the main reef structure. Coralline algae and encrusting corals glue everything together. Click to enlarge.
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Credit: Cordell Bank Expeditions
Anemones
Tiny strawberry anemones stretch their starry crowns of tentacles to catch prey from the food-rich currents. Click to enlarge.
