Corals can reproduce asexually and sexually. Coral
reproductive methods vary according to the species. Some species, such as brain
and star corals, are hermaphrodites, meaning they produce both sperm and
eggs at the same time. Other corals, such as elkhorn and boulder corals,
are gonochoric, meaning that they produce single-sex colonies. In these
species, all of the polyps in one colony produce only sperm, and all of the
polyps in another colony produce only eggs.
Coral larvae
are formed in two different ways. The larvae are either fertilized within
the body of a polyp or fertilized outside of the polyp’s body in the water.
Fertilization of an egg within the body of a coral polyp is achieved from sperm
that is released through the mouth of another polyp. The sperm and egg merge
and form a planula larva, which matures inside the body of its
mother. When the larva is ready, it gets spit out into the water through the
mouth of its mother.
Other species
of coral reproduce by ejecting large quantities of eggs and sperm into the
surrounding water. When this happens, the eggs and sperm fertilize in the
water. This process is called coral spawning. In some areas, mass coral
spawning events occur on one particular night per year and scientists can
predict exactly when this will happen. Trillions of eggs and sperm are
simultaneously released into the water in one of the most astounding acts of
synchronicity in the natural world!
Once in the
sea, larvae are naturally attracted to the light. They swim to the surface of
the ocean, where they remain for days or even weeks. If predators do not eat
the larvae during this time, they fall back to the ocean floor and attach
themselves to a hard surface. An attached planula metamorphasizes into a coral
polyp and begins to grow—dividing itself in half and making exact genetic
copies of itself. As more and more polyps are added, a coral colony develops.
Eventually the coral colony becomes mature, begins reproducing, and the cycle
of life continues.
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