Coral reef in Tubbataha Natural Park
![Image of cnidarians](https://beta-repo.eol.org/data/media/5f/aa/7c/509.2c20f72a90d25cb4132afc77d0ea792d.580x360.jpg)
Description:
Summary[edit] Description: English: The image was taken on a Catlin Seaview Survey expedition to Tubbataha Natural Park of the Philippine waters of the Sulu Sea in the heart of the Coral Triangle. A young, tabulate Acroporid coral can be seen reaching its branches toward the sun to fuel its Symbiodinium algal symbionts with a plethora of reef fishes in the background. It is the marine equivalent of a young tree shooting skyward to fulfil its ecological role in a forest. Corals, branching Acroporids especially, contribute greatly to habitat complexity, or rugosity, of reefs increasing the microhabitats for other reef creatures.”. Date: 29 August 2014. Source: BMC Ecology image competition 2014: the winning images. BMC Ecology 2014, 14:24 doi:10.1186/s12898-014-0024-6. Author: Catherine Kim (University of Queensland).
Included On The Following Pages:
- Life
- Cellular
- Eukaryota (eukaryotes)
- Opisthokonta (opisthokonts)
- Metazoa (animals)
- Cnidaria (cnidarians)
- Anthozoa (anemones and corals)
- Scleractinia (stony corals)
- Acroporidae (staghorn corals)
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Source Information
- license
- cc-by-3.0
- copyright
- Catherine Kim (University of Queensland)
- creator
- Catherine Kim (University of Queensland)
- source
- BMC Ecology image competition 2014: the winning images. BMC Ecology 2014, 14:24 doi:10.1186/s12898-014-0024-6
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- Wikimedia Commons
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