When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sea pen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_pen

    The sea pens' ability to be clumped together and spatially unpredictable hinders sea stars' predation abilities. [9] When touched, some sea pens emit a bright greenish light; this is known as bioluminescence. They may also force water out of their bodies for defence, rapidly deflating and retreating into their peduncle.

  3. Renilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renilla

    Phylum: Cnidaria: Class: ... Family: Renillidae Gray, 1870: Genus: Renilla Lamarck, 1816: Renilla is a genus of sea pen. ... Sea pansy is a common name for species in ...

  4. Ptilosarcus gurneyi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptilosarcus_gurneyi

    (video) Orange sea pens. Ptilosarcus gurneyi, the orange sea pen or fleshy sea pen, is a species of sea pen in the family Pennatulidae. It is native to the northeastern Pacific Ocean where it lives in deep water anchored by its base in sand or mud. It has received its common name because of its resemblance to a quill in a bottle of ink.

  5. Anthozoa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthozoa

    The two main subclasses of Anthozoa are the Hexacorallia, members of which have six-fold symmetry and includes the stony corals, sea anemones, tube anemones and zoanthids; and the Octocorallia, which have eight-fold symmetry and includes the soft corals and gorgonians (sea pens, sea fans and sea whips), and sea pansies.

  6. Pansy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pansy

    The garden pansy (Viola × wittrockiana) is a type of polychromatic large-flowered hybrid plant cultivated as a garden flower. [2] It is derived by hybridization from several species in the section Melanium ("the pansies") [3] of the genus Viola, particularly V. tricolor, a wildflower of Europe and western Asia known as heartsease.

  7. Alcyonacea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcyonacea

    Common names for subsets of this order are sea fans and sea whips; others are similar to the sea pens of related order Pennatulacea. Individual tiny polyps form colonies that are normally erect, flattened, branching, and reminiscent of a fan. Others may be whiplike, bushy, or even encrusting. [4]

  8. Sponge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sponge

    Sponges or sea sponges are primarily marine invertebrates of the metazoan phylum Porifera [4] (/ p ə ˈ r ɪ f ər ə ˌ p ɔː-/ pər-IF-ər-ə, por-; meaning 'pore bearer'), [5] a basal animal clade and a sister taxon of the diploblasts. [6]

  9. Posidonia oceanica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posidonia_oceanica

    The characteristics of the Posidonia plant, its growth dynamics and the large amount of biomass produced, are factors that can sustain very diverse plant and animal communities. Distinguished are: epiphytic communities (that is, bacteria, algae and bryozoa that colonise the surface of the leaves and rhizomes of the plant), vagile and sessile ...