- <p>Elliptical star coral (<i><a href="//commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dichocoenia_stokesii&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="Dichocoenia stokesii (page does not exist)">Dichocoenia stokesii</a></i> <small>Milne Edwards & Haime, 1848</small>) on a patch reef. </p> <p>Stony corals have a patchy distribution in the shallow marine waters surrounding San Salvador Island. They occur as isolated individual colonies, in patch reefs, fringing reefs, and barrier reefs. Stony corals are scleractinian anthozoan cnidarians (there are also non-scleractinian stony corals in the fossil record, such as tabulates and rugosans). They consist of individuals or colonies of gelatinous polyps that secrete hard skeletons of aragonite (CaCO3). Most scleractinian corals live in warm, tropical to subtropical, photic zone environments (the shallow portions of the world’s oceans where sunlight penetrates). Microbes (Symbiodinium - Protista, Dinoflagellata/Pyrrhophyta) called zooxanthellae live in their tissues and need to be in sunlight to make their own food (photosynthesis), which is shared with the host coral animal. Scleractinian corals have stinging cells (nematocysts) in their tentacles that paralyze prey. </p> <p>Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Scleractinia, Meandrinidae </p> <p>Locality: patch reef just west of Cut Cay, eastern Graham's Harbour, northeastern San Salvador Island, eastern Bahamas </p> © James St. John - CC BY 2.0 - Wikimedia Commons
Marine du Prêcheur - Albert Falco