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The most famous polyp colonies are called, "Coral".
While seahorses and sea anemones live together in the wild, it is difficult to keep them together in an aquarium because anemones sting and seahorses can be killed or injured by them.
corals
Where do polyps live
sea anemones live in groups
sea anemones live in places with cold water
Some eukaryotic or prokaryotes live and function together in colonies.
The Great Barrier Reef was formed by nature, with hundreds of years of living coral building upon the skeletons of other coral. The corals that build reefs are not single animals. Coral is made up of colonies comprised of many individual animals called polyps, which join together. Coral polyps are a little like sea anemones, having tentacles that extend outwards, but they are not actually anemones. Corals which create coral reefs have a symbiotic relationship with algae known as zooxanthellae. This algae, which lives within the tissues of the coral, causes a photosynthetic reaction which enables the polyps to make skeletons about three times faster in the light than in the dark. This means the corals deposit skeletons faster than the environment can remove it, and these skeletons build upon each other over time, creating a coral reef.
they live in anemones(:
Why is the Clown Fish called also, an Anenome Fish. They live in a symbiotic arrangement - together forever and amen.
No, archaea and protists are very similar but they do not live together in colonies. Protists is anything that doesn't fit in the category of the other kingdoms. Hope this helped!
The Cyanobacteria do live in water and are often found living together in clumps known as colonies.