Title: How do Corals reproduce
1 How do Corals reproduce?
Corals can reproduce sexually and asexually
throughout their lifetime. Some corals have both
female and male reproductive cells, others are
either male or female. Both sexes can occur
either in a colony or a colony must consist of
individuals of the same sex. If reproducing
sexually, they can either do it by internal or
external fertilization.
2Describe the physical characteristics of a coral
polyp.
- A polyp is one of two forms of individuals found
in many species of cnidarians. - Polyps are approximately cylindrical, elongated
on the axis of the body. - One end of the polyp is attached and the other is
open exposing a mouth. - They have tentacles that may number in hundreds.
3How do corals reproduce?
- Coral reproduce by releasing sperm and eggs in
the water to spread colonies around which is also
called spawning.
4Coral Polyps and Zooxanthellae
- Zooxanthellae play their most important role when
living within coral polyps. Zooxanthellae produce
sugars that are shared with its host.
5 Melanie
How might a boater or a diver affect a coral reef?
Most people take for granted the beatifully
developed coral reefs. When boats go over coral
reefs they stir up the water and the reefs wear
down. Sometimes the boats can even clip sides of
the coral reefs and pollute the water. Some
divers try to catch coral reef fish with cyanide.
The cyanide is a poison that stuns fish and
kills coral. Divers also use crowbars to rip up
reefs to get to the fish.
6Scott
How are coral reefs made?
Coral reefs are built from calcium carbonate in
the mineralogical form of calcite. The coral
skeleton is built from aragonite needle crystals.
7Coral Reefs
- Coral reefs are generally found in clear,
tropical oceans. They are commonly found in
Hawaii and the Caribbean.
8Describe the symbolic relationship between coral
polyps and zooxanthellae (microscopic algae).
- Microscopic algae called zooxanthellae live
within the internal tissue of each coral polyp.
The zooxanthellae are the corals providing the
reef building corals with enough energy to
extract calcium from the seawater to build their
skeletons rapidly. They use sunlight for
photosynthesis and produce oxygen and sugars
which the corals can use. The coral animal
produces carbon dioxide and waste products that
the zooxanthellae use. This symbiosis is so
successful that fast-growing species of branching
corals can grow up to 20 cm per year in shallow
sunlit waters. The zooxanthellae are so numerous
in the coral tissue that they give many corals
their characteristic greenish-brown color.
9How do people on land affect coral reefs?
- Coral reefs are among the most beautiful
ecosystems in the world but are also among the
most susceptible to human impacts and are damaged
or destroyed with alarming ease. The use of
dynamite or poison to capture fish and dropping
boat anchors on corals have produced enormous
damage. Even an accidental touch from divers and
snorkelers can significantly damage the delicate
coral polyps. Pollution, silting from land-based
construction, and fertilizer runoff have led to
damage to coral reefs worldwide by blocking the
sunlight corals require for photosynthesis by
their symbiotic algae. Rising sea temperatures
from global warming can also destroy corals by
ending the symbiotic relationship with
zooxanthellae.
10How can we protect the coral reef?
- By placing harsh laws on areas were its found, so
boats and tourists cant harm the reef. - Also stopping pollution around those areas were
coral reef grow.
11How does Coral Polyp grow?
- Once the polyp dies, then remains are left as a
chalky white skeleton and is then left to be
replaced by another coral. These coral colonies
grow in many shapes, sizes and colors in shallow
cold water.
12What is blast, or dynamite, fishing?
Blast fishing is using dynamite or explosives to
stun or kill large schools of fish so they can be
collected easily. Since blast/dynamite fishing
releases such strong shockwaves to the ocean, it
is a major threat to the coral reef environment.
13What is blast, or dynamite, fishing?
- Fishermen throw dynamite into the water in order
to blow out the fish and collect them for food
later.
14How do people on land affect coral reefs?
- Divers go down to the reef and cut pieces off.
Some people dump toxic chemicals into the water.
15WHY DOES OVER FISHING AFFECT THE CORAL REEF
COMMUNITIES?
- Over fishing can kill total fish populations who
clean the reef by eating the algae.
16Blast/Dynamite fishing
- Blast fishing or dynamite fishing describes the
practice of using dynamite or other explosives to
stun or kill schools of fish for easy collection.
- Destroys the underlying habitat that supports the
fish. - The practice of Dynamite fishing is outlawed yet
it is still practiced in economically desperate
area.
17How might a boater or a diver affect a coral reef?
- Portions of a coral reef can be broken by the
impact of boat anchors and boat groundings. - Divers and snorkelers can harm the reef by
touching it or by removing the corals. - Oil from snorkelers can kill the corals.
Lobster
18Describe at least three human threats to coral
reefs.
- Pollution of coral watersheds
- Dragging hooks, nets and other fishing devices
across the coral reef. - Over fishing
- Trash Debris
Lion Fish
19Why do so many animals live in and among coral
reefs?
- Coral reefs provide an abundant source of food
and shelter to many organisms. The high amounts
of algae and coral provide food to many animals
and these animals are prey to others in the reef.
Also, there is a plentiful amount of space where
organisms can hide and protect themselves from
predators.
Gray Reef Shark
20Name at least 5 species that depend on Coral
Reefs, describing how each relies on the reefs
for survival.
- Clownfish Lives within and is protected by an
anemone, which are poisonous animals that look
like flowers and live on the reef. Clownfish are
immune to the poison. - Man of War A large jellyfish that eats small
fish and other animals that live within the reef. - Blowfish A carnivore that eats coral and other
small organisms that live within the reefs. - Humpback Whale Travels to the coral reef to mate
and give birth. - Moray Eels Camouflaged to hide within the rocks
and coral, in order to sneak up on prey and hide
from predators.
21Why are coral reefs called the rain forests of
the sea?
- Coral reefs are called the rain forests of the
sea because of the vast varieties of color, plant
life, and animal life.
22Where are coral reefs found?
- Coral reefs are found in the warm tropic photic
zone where wave action is mild. Many coral reefs
are found in the Bahamas, Virgin Islands,
Australia and Hawaii.
23Natural Threats to Coral Reefs
- Human expansion and development
- Outflows from water treatment plants
- Over fishing
- Commercial vessels
- Hurricanes
- Crown-of-thorns starfish
24How can we protect coral reefs?
- Treat your water, excess nutrient can damage the
reef. - Only buy animals that have been collected in an
ecologically safe manner. - Recycle
- Conserve water
- Report dumping
25Blast fishing
- A method of fishing which involves the use of
dynamite or homemade explosives to quickly catch
large numbers of fish. - Used on coral reefs in Asia, Africa, the South
Pacific, and the Caribbean, the effects are
devastating to reef life.
26Colony
- a group of coral polyps that takes the specific
shapes of that species of coral
27Algae
- Chiefly aquatic, eukaryotic one-celled or
multicellular plants without true stems, roots
and leaves, that are typically autotrophic,
photosynthetic, and contain chlorophyll