Around the time that the thirteen original Atlantic colonies were fighting for independence from Britain, there existed little agreement among naturalists as to the nature of corals. Were they inanimate (stones), plants, animals, or intermediate between the latter two (zoophytes)? This diversity of definition and opinions undoubtedly produced considerable confusion and disagreement among naturalists interested in such things. The symbiotic nature of algal cells in the tissues of some corals was also not well understood. It was not until the Darwinian period in the nineteenth century that little doubt remained, and therefore it was generally agreed, that corals were actually animals – heterotrophic living organisms that prey on other organisms for nutrition and do not produce their own food.
Member of
Contributors
Publisher
Office of Habitat Conservation, NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD.
Date Issued
2006
Note
Language
Type
Genre
Extent
57 p.
Subject (Topical)
Identifier
3172990
Additional Information
Around the time that the thirteen original Atlantic colonies were fighting for independence from Britain, there existed little agreement among naturalists as to the nature of corals. Were they inanimate (stones), plants, animals, or intermediate between the latter two (zoophytes)? This diversity of definition and opinions undoubtedly produced considerable confusion and disagreement among naturalists interested in such things. The symbiotic nature of algal cells in the tissues of some corals was also not well understood. It was not until the Darwinian period in the nineteenth century that little doubt remained, and therefore it was generally agreed, that corals were actually animals – heterotrophic living organisms that prey on other organisms for nutrition and do not produce their own food.
This publication is available at http://purl.access.gpo.gov/GPO/LPS120470 and may be cited as: Etnoyer, P., Cairns, S. D., Sanchez, J. A., Reed, J. K., Lopez, J. V., Schroeder, W. W., Brooke, S. D., Watling, L., Baco-Taylor, A., Williams, G. C., Lindner, A., France, S. C., & Bruckner, A. W. (2006). Deepsea coral collection protocols: a synthesis of field experience from deep-sea coral researchers, designed to build our national capacity to document deep-sea coral diversity. In P. J. Etnoyer, NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-OPR-28. (pp. 1-49).
Florida Atlantic University. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute contribution #1643.
Date Backup
2006
Date Text
2006
Date Issued (EDTF)
2006
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing10139", creator="creator:BCHANG", creation_date="2011-08-04 17:33:02", modified_by="super:FAUDIG", modification_date="2014-02-11 11:13:38"
IID
FADT3172990
Issuance
single unit
Person Preferred Name
Etnoyer, P.
creator
Physical Description
57 p.
Title Plain
Deepsea coral collection protocols: a synthesis of field experience from deep-sea coral researchers, designed to build our national capacity to document deep-sea coral diversity
Origin Information
Office of Habitat Conservation, NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD.
2006
single unit
Title
Deepsea coral collection protocols: a synthesis of field experience from deep-sea coral researchers, designed to build our national capacity to document deep-sea coral diversity
Other Title Info
Deepsea coral collection protocols: a synthesis of field experience from deep-sea coral researchers, designed to build our national capacity to document deep-sea coral diversity