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Koral?
: lør 23. okt 2010 06:49
af John Erik
Jeg er kommet i besiddelse af en ny
koral, som jeg gerne vil vide lidt om. Den minder om en skiveoral. Farven er brunlig, men fra skiven går der mange tråde der ydes lyser grønt. Når det er helt udfoldet er skiverne af form som en klokke.
Hvis nogen kan hjælpe vil det være dejligt.
Mvh
JEO
Re: Koral?
: lør 23. okt 2010 07:42
af ole kekkonen
har den noget substrat?
Re: Koral?
: lør 23. okt 2010 07:58
af spdiving
Den hurtigste og mest sikere hjælp får du hvis du smider et billede op af den.
Steen
Re: Koral?
: lør 23. okt 2010 14:45
af John Erik
Dens substrat er en levende sten.
Re: Koral?
: lør 23. okt 2010 15:13
af kenneth145
Det skulle vel ikke være en majano
anemone??
Re: Koral?
: lør 23. okt 2010 15:25
af ole kekkonen
hvis du er til engelsk har jeg støvet den her artikkel op til dig
Abstract:
Stony corals, which form the framework for modern reefs, are classified as Scleractinia (Cnidaria, Anthozoa, and Hexacorallia) in reference to their external aragonitic skeletons. However, persistent notions, collectively known as the ‘‘naked coral’’ hypothesis, hold that the scleractinian skeleton does not define a natural group. Three main lines of evidence have suggested that some stony corals are more closely related to one or more of the soft-bodied hexacorallian groups than they are to other scleractinians: (i) morphological similarities; (ii) lack of phylogenetic resolution in molecular analyses of scleractinians; and (iii) discrepancy between the commencement of a diverse scleractinian fossil record at 240 million years ago (Ma) and a molecule-based origination of at least 300 Ma. No molecular evidence has been able to clearly reveal relationships at the base of a well supported clade composed of scleractinian lineages and the nonskeletonized Corallimorpharia. We present complete mitochondrial genome data that provide strong evidence that one clade of scleractinians is more closely related to Corallimorpharia than it is to a another clade of scleractinians. Thus, the scleractinian skeleton, which we estimate to have originated between 240 and 288 Ma, was likely lost in the ancestry of Corallimorpharia. We estimate that Corallimorpharia originated between 110 and 132 Ma during the late- to mid-Cretaceous, coinciding with high levels of oceanic CO2, which would have impacted aragonite solubility. Corallimorpharians escaped extinction from aragonite skeletal dissolution, but some modern stony corals may not have such fortunate fates under the pressure of increased anthropogenic CO2 in the ocean.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1675 ... 00m,isrctn
nyd den
