by laying 2-3 eggs in the summer
Some corals are able to reproduce asexually. The corals that produce sexually release eggs and sperm, which meet in the water and fertilize themselves.
Corals reproduce both sexually and asexually.
the reproduce of the corals so easy its repriduce in the algea.
Corals don't really die, they can reproduce asexually though budding and branching, and sexually, but the original corals don't seem to ever die of "old age"
If you are reffering to Fungia, a genus of corals, its purpose is the same as all animals, to live, grow, and reproduce.
Plenty of animals are sessile, meaning attached to something like a plant. They include sponges, anemones, corals, barnacles, and sea squirts. Their larva larvae do swim around, though corals can reproduce by budding.
Plenty of animals are sessile, meaning attached to something like a plant. They include sponges, anemones, corals, barnacles, and sea squirts. Their larva larvae do swim around, though corals can reproduce by budding.
Plenty of animals are sessile, meaning attached to something like a plant. They include sponges, anemones, corals, barnacles, and sea squirts. Their larva larvae do swim around, though corals can reproduce by budding.
soft corals live deeper water than hard corals because soft corals do not create a hard outer skeleton as the hard corals do.
Corals are plants.
Corals are not decomposers. They are consumers.
Hermatypic corals contain zooxanthellae (a symbiotic algae), whereas ahermatypic corals do not. It is like saying that hermatypic corals are photosynthetic, where ahermatypic corals are non photosynthetic.