deepwater coral "reefs"?
EricHugo at aol.com
EricHugo at aol.com
Sat May 27 14:53:03 UTC 2000
Hi Alina and coral-list:
Is there a point when a correct usage of "bioherm" over "reef" for such
structures became semantically favored? I ask because I find the following
perhaps relevant:
Coates, Anthony G. and Jeremy B.C. Jackson. 1987. Clonal growth, algal
symbiosis, and reef formation by corals. Paleobiology 13(4) 363-378.
(I will not quote directly to avoid copyright concerns, although I also hope
that the authors will point out if my translation is incorrect or improper,
although I maintain the textual use of the word "reef" and "bioherm" ).
"Rugosan corals that formed reefs likely lacked zooxanthellae because of
morphological evidence. Most zooxanthellate corals today and in the fossil
record contribute to reef formation, but many others are ahermatypic. Recent
reef formation has little to do with being zooxanthellate but depends on
environmental factors. Using morphology to indicate the presence of
zooxanthellae, there exist recent deepwater analogues to the shallow water
azooxanthellate Devonian Edgecliff Bioherm. "
Here we have a concatination of terms, distribution, history, and ecology
that makes this thread all the more intriguing.
Thanks for the clarification
Eric Borneman
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