What constitutes a 'coral reef'?

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Codyjp

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I was just reading another post and it got me wondering, what defines a coral reef?

Is there a minimum size? hard or soft coral growth? what is it?
 
the answers varie with variety and region, not really one answer out there to my knowledge, did you try google, yahoo or such?
 
Coral.

A CORAL reef would have to have coral, a reef may or may not be a coral reef.


Read about The Great Permian Reef, reef systems have not always been composed of primarily corals.

N
 
A coral reef is a community of marine organisms centered around benthic animals--coral. In my training, I have seen no specific size parameters. The only defining criteria seems to be that the reef is self-sustaining and supports a variety of sealife that usually includes coral, fish, mollusks, algae, and many other types of organisms.
Yup, this is a pretty stirile definition that really doesn't do justice for such a beautiful, fascinating, and almost mystical realm of the ocean, but it's the best I can do.
 
The reef terminology is not exclusive to the underwater environment, ie Capital Reef National Park - in UTAH. But, when you put reef and coral together, well, we know what that is...
 
ok, so question 2. california has a few places that coral grows (Farnsworth bank is one). so is this a coral reef? I am really just trying to steal some fame from Florida who claims to have the only coral reef in the US.
 
Codyjp:
ok, so question 2. california has a few places that coral grows (Farnsworth bank is one). so is this a coral reef? I am really just trying to steal some fame from Florida who claims to have the only coral reef in the US.
At 60 or 70 feet at the shallowest, it's a bank or a mount, not a reef.
 
Hmmmm...so does a reef have to be shallow enough to be hit by a ship to be called a reef?

Interstingly, the federal government seems to classify banks as reefs, too. Take this excerpt from the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary website:
The Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary encompasses a variety of habitat types, including the northernmost coral reefs in the continental United States.

Who am I to argue with that? Therefore, I tend to dispute Florida's claim to the only coral reefs in the U.S. And then, ask the folks in Hawaii. They might dispute the claim, too.
 

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