Thursday, March 19, 2015 at 9:13AM
Drew Wolfe
Scientists Catch Up On the Sex Life of Coral to Help Reefs Survive

"For the first time, biologists have caught a rare type of coral in the act of reproducing, and they were able to collect its sperm and eggs and breed the coral in the laboratory. "

"The success is part of an effort to stem the decline in many types of coral around the world."

"To understand how this works, you need to know that coral reefs are actually colonies of tiny organisms encased in hard skeletons. In many kinds of coral, the whole colony reproduces at once, in a spectacular event called 'broadcast spawning.' Males eject clouds of sperm into the water, and then females do the same with eggs. The sea creatures cross their fingers (or whatever the coral equivalent of that is) and hope for the best."

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