Puneet Varma (Editor)

Diploastrea heliopora

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Anthozoa

Order
  
Scleractinia

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Cnidaria

Subclass
  
Hexacorallia

Family
  
Diploastreidae

Diploastrea heliopora commondatastoragegoogleapiscomaimscoralimages

Similar
  
Scleractinia, Leptoria, Platygyra, Favites, Goniastrea

Diploastrea heliopora moon coral spawning at pulau satumu 260416


Diploastrea heliopora, known commonly as the diploastrea brain coral or honeycomb coral among other vernacular names, is a species of hard coral in the family Diploastreidae. It is the only species in the genus Diploastrea. This species can form massive dome-shaped colonies of great size.

Contents

Diploastrea heliopora Diploastrea heliopora Corals of the World Photos maps and

Diploastrea heliopora 01 27 2014


Taxonomy

Diploastrea heliopora Diploastrea heliopora Corals of the World Photos maps and

Diploastrea heliopora was first described in 1816 by the French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck as Astrea heliopora. It was transferred to the new genus Diploastrea by G. Matthai in 1914. Diploastrea heliopora was included in the family Agathiphylliidae by T.W. Vaughan and J.W. Wells in 1943. It was the only extant member of the family, which also included four fossil species. In 1956, Wells transferred the genus to Faviidae, and this has been widely accepted. However, recent molecular and phylogenetic studies show that this coral has certain unique features, and a separate family, Diploastreidae, has been reinstated. It is the only member of the family.

Description

Diploastrea heliopora Honeycomb coral photo Diploastrea heliopora G64137 ARKive

A colonial species, D. heliopora grows into domes 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) or more across. The corallites are plocoid (with an individual wall), round and closely packed, about 1 cm (0.4 in) in diameter and formed by extratentacular budding. The corallite walls are distinctive, being not solid but formed from the enlarged outer ends of the septa, which are not connected to each other. The columellae are large. The coral has a smooth surface and is usually cream or greyish-brown, sometimes tinged with green. It is a zooxanthellate species.

Distribution and habitat

Diploastrea heliopora Honeycomb coral photo Diploastrea heliopora G64021 ARKive

This species is widespread throughout the tropical waters of the Indo-West Pacific region, including the Red Sea, occurring at depths down to 30 m (100 ft). Its typical habitat is in silty environments without strong wave action such as protected fringing reefs and back reef slopes. In the atoll lagoons of the Indian Ocean it is often plentiful and dominant, while in the Red Sea it is uncommon.

Ecology

Diploastrea heliopora FileMoon Coral Diploastrea heliopora 8473142043jpg Wikimedia

Small gobies can often be found perching on this coral or swimming around the surface searching for food. This coral is a zooxanthellate species; the coral houses symbiotic dinoflagellates within its tissues which supply it with much of the nourishment it needs. The polyps supplement this by extending their tentacles to feed, but do so only at night.

Status

D. heliopora is plentiful in some areas but less common elsewhere. In Indonesia it is collected for the aquarium trade, but apart from this, the threats it faces are those affecting coral reefs in general; climate change, ocean acidification, coral disease and human actions. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed its conservation status as being "near threatened".

References

Diploastrea heliopora Wikipedia