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  2. Octocorallia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octocorallia

    Octocorallia (also known as Alcyonaria) is a class of Anthozoa comprising over 3,000 species [1] of marine organisms formed of colonial polyps with 8-fold symmetry. It includes the blue coral, soft corals, sea pens, and gorgonians (sea fans and sea whips) within three orders: Alcyonacea, Helioporacea, and Pennatulacea. [2]

  3. Alcyonacea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcyonacea

    In the past, soft corals were thought to be unable to lay new foundations for future corals, but recent findings suggest that colonies of the leather-coral genus Sinularia are able to cement sclerites and consolidate them at their base into alcyonarian spiculite, [10] thus making them reef builders.

  4. Coral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral

    Soft corals vary considerably in form, and most are colonial. A few soft corals are stolonate, but the polyps of most are connected by sheets of tissue called coenosarc, and in some species these sheets are thick and the polyps deeply embedded in them. Some soft corals encrust other sea objects or form lobes.

  5. Anthozoa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthozoa

    Anthozoans are exclusively marine, and include sea anemones, stony corals, soft corals, sea pens, sea fans and sea pansies. Anthozoa is the largest taxon of cnidarians; over six thousand solitary and colonial species have been described. They range in size from small individuals less than half a centimetre across to large colonies a metre or ...

  6. Scleractinia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scleractinia

    Scleractinia, also called stony corals or hard corals, are marine animals in the phylum Cnidaria that build themselves a hard skeleton. The individual animals are known as polyps and have a cylindrical body crowned by an oral disc in which a mouth is fringed with tentacles. Although some species are solitary, most are colonial.

  7. Carijoa riisei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carijoa_riisei

    Carijoa riisei is a colonial soft coral with a tangled, bushy growth form. It has hollow branches that may be 30 cm (12 in) long, growing from a creeping stolon. The branches grow by budding off the stolon and have eight longitudinal furrows and a prominent polyp at the tip.

  8. Alcyonium coralloides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcyonium_coralloides

    Alcyonium coralloides, commonly known as false coral, is a colonial species of soft coral in the family Alcyoniidae. It is native to the northeastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. In the former location it generally grows as sheets or small lobes but in the latter it is parasitic and overgrows sea fans.

  9. Antillogorgia bipinnata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antillogorgia_bipinnata

    Antillogorgia bipinnata, the bipinnate sea plume, is a species of colonial soft coral, a sea fan in the family Gorgoniidae.It is found in the Caribbean Sea.It was first described as Pseudopterogorgia bipinnata in 1864 by the American zoologist Addison Emery Verrill.