Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Favia fragum

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Anthozoa

Order
  
Scleractinia

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Cnidaria

Subclass
  
Hexacorallia

Family
  
Mussidae

Favia fragum commondatastoragegoogleapiscomaimscoralimages

Similar
  
Diploria clivosa, Siderastrea radians, Isophyllia sinuosa, Dichocoenia stokesi, Meandrina meandrites

Favia fragum planula


Favia fragrum is a species of colonial stony coral in the family Mussidae. It is commonly known as the golfball coral and is found in tropical waters on either side of the Atlantic Ocean.

Contents

Favia fragum coral showing heavy infestations of the ciliate philaster sp mvi 0090 mov


Description

The golfball coral is small and usually hemispherical in shape with a number of large corallites packed closely together, but It can occur in groups or may occasionally grow as an encrusting coral. The corallites contain one to three polyps and are normally round but can become elongated into an oval shape when the polyps are budding and a new corallite is being formed. The corallite walls usually consist of four complete whorls of septa and do not project appreciably from the surface of the coral. The costae of different corallites are distinct from one another. The colour is usually yellow or pale brown.

Distribution

The golfball coral is found in the tropical Atlantic Ocean at depths down to 30 metres (98 ft) with its range extending from the west coast of equatorial Africa to South America, the Caribbean Sea and the southern United States. It is an inconspicuous species and occurs on coral reefs, on rocks, in seagrass meadows and among seaweed. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species lists it as being of "least concern". This is because it is widespread and common and a loss of habitat from coral reef destruction is unlikely to impact it significantly.

References

Favia fragum Wikipedia