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Those classified as hard corals excrete calcium carbonate to make a skeleton which is shared by the surrounding polyps. Many of them have a microscopic organism living within them called zooxanthallae which photosynthesizes food for the coral. They (the zooxanthellae)are a type of plant so they need sunlight to do this...for this reason corals live mainly in shallow waters. (often the best diving is in about 12 mtres of water). The other type of coral..soft coral sometimes forms calcium carbonate to, but they are often in the forms of fibres that reinforce structure. When coral feeds ( on the plankton and micro-organisms suspended in the water) the polyps are extended making them look more like flowers than animals. When the polyps are withdrawn the calcified structure is all that is obvious.
This is a Moorish Idol.
Sea turtle resting on the bottom. They visit Heron Island to lay their eggs.
Sponge (Porifera - means pore bearer) comes in many shapes and colours. It is also an animal..very simple single colonial animal, that basically filters micro-organisms out of the water. They do best in areas with some current. They have openings where the water flows in, is flitered of food then flows out. They help keep water clean as they act like filters. There are fossils of sponges that are 1800 million years old....this makes them a life form that evolved very early on in the history of life on earth.
pair of nudibranchs. The feathery bits are their gills. The name, nudibranch means naked gill. above and below.
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This is a Black Noddy Tern (Anous minutus). They breed on the island.
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Manta Ray . We saw manta rays on most dives this trip. They are really big rays with a span that can be measured in metres. Both of these were at least 2 metres across. They are harmless to people and they are filter feeders feeding on tiny organisms suspended in the water. The extensions at the front helps funnel the water into their mouths.
The orange in this image is sponge. The feathery structures next to it are hydroids, relatives of the anemones. They have stinging cells to immobilise small prey (The stinging cells are a charactersitic of all the Cnidarians)
Sometimes when swimming through gaps or under overhangs you come across a school of fish. As they swim past every single eye looks at you and they all have they same expression, it is almost surrealistic and every time it happens it is as exciting as the first. These fish are Hussar.
During the summer months and a little before and after sea turtles come to Heron Island to lay their eggs. The hatchlings often emerge on mass from the nest (a hole in the sand where the eggs were buried) at night time. (it gives them protection from many birds) but some times odd ones emerge in daylight hours and make their way to the water. If they aren't eaten by birds first, they have to swim the guantlet....the sharks know that there are hatchlings at this time of year so they hang in the shallows and wait for them arrive, picking off most of them before they get to come up for their third breath of air. Turtles can lay roughly 60 - 160 eggs each year that they reproduce. They live along time, it is estimated that they may not reach sexual maturity till they are at least 25 years old. They may live around 80 years but figures are estimates because no one really knows. In their lifetime out of all the eggs they produce only 2 need to make it to adulthood and reproduce to keep the numbers up. (Thats the theory anyway...its one very good reason why these animals need protecting....from people) In the early days of Heron Island's history the island was used for making turtle soup. Now there is a turtle research station there.
This is a Gorgonia fan...a type of coral.
When we think of worms we generally dosn't envisage creatures that we would think of as attractive but marine flatworms can be really eye catching like this one pictured above. Some of these worms can swim by undulating their bodies and they look like a ribbon fluttering in the breeze. This one was about 6cm long.
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This is a hard coral.
Hard coral. Corals are hard to identify to species level because colonies of the same species can take on very different forms according to where they are growing.
This a coral with all its polyps exposed for feeding. double click on this to have a closer look.
In this coral head there are other creatures living in holes, they are tiny hermit crabs...less than 1 cm across. Most hermit crabs live in shells that they claim, these little crabs spend their hole..oops, whole life living in the same coral head. I have not found these crabs very often, it is a shame that when you are doing a 'drift dive' you cant stop for too long at any one place to have a really good look.
This is another type of colonial animal...not as simple as a sponge however. The mass above is actually a group of colonial sea-squirts...or ascidians. Their lives are fairly simple, another creature that just sucks water in, filters it of food and then squirts it out. each individual generally has an inlet syphon and an outlet syphon. Sometimes though in colonies they may share an outlet. When these organisms are in the early stages of their lives they are free swimming larvae for a number of hours before they settle in a suitable spot. The really intersting thing about these creatures is that they have a very rudimentry spinal chord..or notochord! This is the first of what we see of a backbone. All creatures with back bones, including us, evolved from this creatures ancient ancestor...the beginnings of the tree of chordates ..or back boned creatures.
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This is a hard coral.
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