Open Brain Coral on the Ocean Floor

Mon, Jan 11, 2010

Featured

Environmental Graffiti Will be Changing Dramatically Soon. Get a Sneak Preview By Signing Up Here.

An_open_brain-coral_(Trachyphyllia)_in_aquarium
Photo: RevolverOcelot

Images of gore that would make an axe murderer proud are not the sort of stuff you would expect to find on the ocean floor, but with open brain corals that’s exactly what you get. Less gruesomely known as crater corals or pacific rose corals, open brain corals are a favourite with aquarium owners but might also prove popular with slasher movie fanatics or proponents of bad brain surgery, if only they knew. Take a gander and see what you think.

Definitely something on the brain: Red Wellsophyllia open brain coral
Red_Wellsophyllia_Open_Brain_Coral
Photo: Reefland

Tough, colourful and captivating, open or folded brain corals are stony specimens characterised by two or three growths of expanding fleshy tissue known as polyps projecting from their base. The way their skeletons form miniature valleys with separate, pinched walls is what makes them appear so delightfully brain-like to human perception.

Purple patch: Wellsophyllia open brain coral
Wellsophyllia_Open_Brain_Coral
Photo: MonsterReef

Think pink: Open brain coral shot in California
Open_Brain_Coral_Orange,_CA
Photo: saimo_mx70

Typically found in the waters off Australia, the Indo Pacific and Fiji, open brain corals display a wonderful array of colours, making them all the more marvellous. Opaque, blue, green and red colours are commonly found in the aquarium industry, where the corals are made to fluoresce beautifully under actinic lighting.

Hello my pretty: Open brain coral in the evening under actinic lighting
Open_brain_coral_in_the_evening_under_actinic_lighting
Photo: RevolverOcelot

Blooming marvellous: Trachyphyllia geoffroyi red open brain coral
open_brain_coral_red_trachyphyllia
Photo: Reefland

Showing they have a disposition to match their macabre name, open brain corals are voracious plankton-feeders in their natural habitats. The rows of tentacles around their mouths measure as large as 10mm, and during the evening and night time these stinging tendrils come out to capture prey. These beauties of the ocean floor can also swell up to pull themselves out of their holes in the sand and even move around the sand bed. See? Not just a pretty face – and an ugly name.

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4

If you want to find out all the latest news on the environment, why not subscribe to our RSS feed? We’ll even throw in a free album.

, , , , ,

You Might Also Like Our Friends' Posts From the Intertubes

“The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else.”


This post was written by:

Karl Fabricius - who has written 289 posts on Environmental Graffiti.

Karl was raised in Wales and now lives in Bristol, though his family tree branches to both sides of the Atlantic. Besides holding an English MA, he’s made a documentary on grassroots boxing, played – and still plays – drums in punk rock bands, and travelled some cool parts of the globe. He’s currently an editor and writer scribbling about things worth scribbling about – specifically the environment and all things bizarre.

Contact the author

3 Comments For This Post

Leave a Reply

  1. kroon78 Says:

    This renewed my interest in a salt water aquarium.

  2. Alizee Says:

    Awesome! Thanks

  3. mrcommenter Says:

    That last one kinda looks like a balloon knot.

ss_blog_claim=68ded206efcf0b5d4bf955123f191aba