Authors
ANdré FreiwAld, Lydia Beuck, Andres Rüggeberg, Marco Taviani, Dierk Hebbeln, R/V Meteor Cruise M70-1 Participants
Publication date
2009/3/1
Journal
Oceanography
Volume
22
Issue
1
Pages
58-74
Publisher
The Oceanography Society
Description
White coral communities consist of scleractinian corals that thrive in the ocean's bathyal depths (~ 200–4000 m). In the Atlantic Ocean, white corals are known to form complex, three-dimensional structures on the seabed that attract vast amounts of other organisms, accumulate suspended detritus, and influence the local hydrodynamic flow field. These attributes coincide with what we generally describe as a coral reef. With time, environmental change causes decline of the framework-constructing corals; this is followed by erosion of the reef sequence or its draping with noncoral-related deposits. After several such sequences, the structures are known as coral carbonate mounds, which can grow as high as 350 m. Both bathyal white coral reefs and mounds are widely distributed in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent marginal seas, such as the Gulf of Mexico. The Mediterranean Sea, however, known for its richness of …
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