Coral

Page 1



S TA R T S M A L L , T H I N K B I G

o l f a ting y n i t by Mary Auld Consultants: Kirsten Golding of CoralWatch, Dr. Sally Keith and Dr. Lisa Boström-Einarsson

illustrations by La Scarlatte


Here I am, a tiny, floating coral planula. I am a minute animal drifting through the ocean, looking for the perfect place to live and grow. A planula is the early stage in the life cycle of tiny animals called polyps that form a coral reef. Ocean water is full of microscopic life—lots of different plants and animals too small for us to see.


Here is a coral reef. I will settle here, where the sea is warm and calm. Can you find me?

Coral reefs grow in shallow water off the coast, in warm, tropical seas and oceans.

A planula usually settles on healthy coral reefs where there is lots of other life around.

A planula senses a good spot to grow. It uses tiny hairs to move down to a space on the reef.


Here I am starting to settle. I am changing shape! My body becomes flat, and I make a chalky substance to attach myself to the reef.

When it settles, a planula changes shape completely to become an adult polyp. This change is called metamorphosis. tentacle

Now I can reach out my tentacles into the water.

mouth

They will collect things I need to grow and protect myself.

stomach corallite (hard skeleton)


Here I am splitting in two! I am budding—making a new polyp. This new polyp will split, too. We do this again and again. We will become a coral colony.

A colony is group of animals that lives and works together.

An adult polyp splits to make a copy of itself.

Each polyp makes a hard skeleton, connected to the previous one. The hard skeletons build an amazing-shaped coral colony.


Here is my colony. We are called smooth cauliflower coral. To grow fast, we need food! Corals need energy to grow. They get some of this energy from microscopic food they catch in the seawater, but they need much more. smooth cauliflower coral


We have a secret food supply. Tiny life-forms called algae live inside us. Algae make food from sunshine and share their food with us.

algae The coral protects the algae inside its body. In return, the algae give some of their food to the coral. The algae inside the coral polyps are called zooxanthellae (zoo-zan-thell-ay).


And look at the other coral growing around us. We all have our own special shape and color.

Hard corals build the reef, as the corallite under each polyp grows taller. Some form branching shapes.

tube sponge pillar coral

plate coral

branching coral tube coral


Soft corals, such as sea fans and whips, have more flexible bodies that move in the water.

sea fan

purple whip fan massive coral


Here are fish, turtles, crabs, and all sorts of other life. Our reef is an underwater forest, home to many animals. Sharks hunt across the reef, looking for prey. They eat smaller fish and other reef animals.

Green turtles eat algae that grow on the coral.

Small fish feed among the coral. Their bright colors and patterns help them hide from predators.


Stingrays seem to fly through the water. They feed on small animals that live in the sand, such as worms and clams.

Look out for sharks, little fish!


Here is our reef at night. Night hunters look for prey hiding among us. Small fish sleep hidden in the coral. This keeps them safe from predators, such as reef sharks. Tiny shrimps hide in the coral by day but come out to feed at night.

Blackspotted pufferfish and lionfish are safe from predators because they are venomous.


At night, we all reach out our tentacles to catch food in the darkness. Coral tentacles sting. They stun and catch their tiny prey, the microscopic life in the water. Those with long tentacles can pass food into their mouths.

ivory bush coral (Oculina varicosa)

flowerpot coral (Goniopora columna)

smooth cauliflower coral (Stylophora pistillata)

bird’s nest coral (Seriatopora hystrix)

orange sun coral (Tubastraea faulkneri)


Here are islands formed by my reef. The reef lives and grows for thousands of years.

Reefs help to create beautiful beaches—safe places for baby turtles to hatch.

Pieces of dead coral and sand can pile up on part of a reef to form islands called cays or keys. Birds bring seeds to the islands and plants begin to grow.


Here is the Great Barrier Reef, my reef’s home. It is so huge it can be seen from space! The Great Barrier Reef lies off the east coast of Queensland, Australia.

PAPUA PAPUA NEW GUINEA

INDONESIA Darwin

Gre

Indian Ocean

Ba

at

Cairns

NORTHERN TERRITORY

Coral Sea rrie

rR

e

ef

QUEENSLAND

AUSTRALIA

WESTERN AUSTRALIA

Brisbane SOUTH AUSTRALIA

Perth Indian Ocean

NEW SOUTH WALES

Adelaide

Sydney Canberra

VICTORIA Arctic Ocean

Melbourne EUROPE

NORTH AMERICA

ASIA Pacific Ocean

AFRICA Indian Ocean

OCEANIA

Southern Ocean

Gre ANTARCTICA at Ba rrier Reef

Atlantic Ocean

SOUTH AMERICA

TASMANIA

Hobart

The Great Barrier Reef is made up of nearly 3,000 separate reefs and has over 900 islands.


Here is coral spawning. The moon is full, and the tide is high. We are creating new life, spreading coral to other parts of the ocean.


Once a year, most hard corals give out tiny male and female gametes into the water. When they join together, they form a planula, a baby coral.

Fish, sea slugs, and other sea creatures eat gametes, but the coral produce so many that enough survive.


We have made millions of new baby coral. Most will be eaten, but the rest will settle to form new colonies and new reefs. Each newly formed planula floats with the ocean currents. It is part of the microscopic life, or plankton, that many sea animals feed on.

One of the largest plankton eaters is the whale shark. It sucks in water through its huge mouth and filters out its tiny food through its gills.


Here is the colony I created, now part of a thriving coral reef. Divers explore our amazing underwater home.

open


But our reefs are in danger. Scientists have shown us that there are things we can do to help. A lot of coral is dying. The water has become too warm. Humans are using a lot of energy, causing our oceans to warm up. This makes the algae leave the coral and it turns white, or bleaches. It can die.

open

Crown-of-thorns starfish are eating my reef! Divers are trying to keep down the numbers of these huge coral-eating starfish.


Pollution has made our water dirty.

Divers also plant new coral to create new life.

Divers clean up the reef and take water samples for testing.

With everyone’s help, my reef can survive and be home to a wonderful world of underwater life.


16in x16in fold-out



o a l f ting y n i t

S TA R T S M A L L , THINK BIG Unfold a world of discovery with this series that takes readers from the small and familiar to new areas of

This story starts with a tiny coral planula floating through the ocean in a soup of plankton. It is an animal looking for the perfect place to settle, divide, and grow. Learn about the remarkable life of coral, how it feeds, starts a colony, and becomes a part of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef— the largest coral reef ecosystem on Earth. This story ends with a fold-out map.

knowledge where you really have to think big.

Are you ready to think BIG?

Also Available

ISBN 978-1-63655-123-4

$15.99 US $19.99 CAN Tiny Floating Coral This edition published in 2024 by Red Comet Press, LLC, Brooklyn, NY First published in the UK by Mama Makes Books • Text copyright © 2024 Mary Auld Illustrations copyright © 2024 La Scarlatte All rights reserved. Library of Congress Control Number: 2024930226 ISBN (HB): 978-1-636-55-123-4 • ISBN (EBOOK): 978-1-63655-124-1 23 24 25 26 27 / 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Manufactured in China using FSC paper and eco-friendly inks Distributed in North America by ABRAMS, New York.

9 781636 551234

51599


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