Marie and Jonathan Coral Conservation Project - Planhotel

-
Adopt a frame

Marie and Jonathan

Thank you for signing up to keep in touch with the Coral Conservation Project. Pictured above, you will find your coral frame as it was few days after construction. Your personal page will allow you to see regular updates and amazing facts about the corals and animals living on your frame. You will also be able to revisit older post and see just how much your frame has progressed since the day of construction. If you want to satisfy your curiosity even more, you can take a look at our Marine Blog Life and videos from the Marine Lab Diary or connect with us for more information.
Here is the start of a healthy coral reef relationship!
31 January 2020

The coral on your frame is thriving. The fragments attached at the beginning are growing very well. All the fragments of this digitate Acropora are now fusing together. We applied the micro-fusion technique that has been described by the Mote Marine Laboratory in Florida. In particular, when putting fragments of the same genotype close to each other they can stimulate the fusion of these fragments, speeding up their growth rate. When doing coral frame restoration or maintenance we usually apply this technique when we find a huge broken colony. We cut off small branches and then we attach them very close to each other as you can see here.

31 December 2019

The Chromis viridis , known commonly as green puller, has found in your coral frame its home. This particular fish is known also as green damselfish. They only reach an adult size of 3-4 inches (7.6-10 cm).There are several contestants for the title of most important reef fish family, but the Damselfish are certainly one of the front-runners. Not only are there numerous species, but also many of these species are present on Maldivian reefs in prodigious numbers. The green damselfish that you can see in the picture is associated with isolated coral heads in sheltered inshore habitats. Like all damselfish, they can be territorial and aggressive, especially as they get older.

30 November 2019

Coral reefs are built and made up of thousands of tiny animals called coral “polyps” that  can live individually (like many mushroom corals do) or in large colonies that comprise an entire reef structure. A polyp has a sac-like body and an opening, or mouth, encircled by stinging tentacles called nematocysts or cnidae (imagine an upside down jellyfish). The polyp extracts calcium and carbonate ions from seawater to build itself a hard, cup-shaped skeleton made of calcium carbonate (limestone). This limestone skeleton protects the soft, delicate body of the polyp. Coral polyps are usually nocturnal, meaning that they stay inside their skeletons during the day. At night, polyps extend their tentacles to feed. Most coral polyps have clear bodies whereas their skeletons are completely white, like human bones. Generally, their brilliant color comes from the zooxanthellae (tiny algae) living inside their tissues. Several million zooxanthellae live and produce pigments in just one square inch of coral. These pigments are visible through the clear body of the polyp and are what gives coral its beautiful color.