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Acropora sp.

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    Posted: May 31 2006 at 2:03am
Acropora sp.

Acropora formosa Acropora hyacinthus
      
     So my plan is to try and alternate sps and lps every week. Acropora is the most dominate sps class we have. But before we can start on individual species of acropora we must learn about the genus itself.



    Kingdom: Animalia (animals)
     Phylum: Cnidaria (cnidarians)
      Class: Anthozoa (anemones and corals)
       Subclass: Zoantharia
        Suborder: Astrocoeniina
        Order: Scleractinia (stony corals)
        Family: Acroporidae
          Genus: Acropora                                


Acropora efflorescens


Species:
                                                                   



     Acropora abrolhosensis     Acropora abrotanoides     Acropora aculeus          Acropora acuminata     
Acropora akajimensis     Acropora anthocercis     Acropora appressa     Acropora arabensis     
     Acropora aspera     Acropora austera     Acropora awi     Acropora azurea
Acropora batunai     Acropora bifurcata     Acropora branchi     Acropora brueggemanni
     Acropora bushyensis     Acropora cardenae     Acropora carduus     Acropora caroliniana
Acropora cerealis     Acropora cervicornis     Acropora chesterfieldensis     Acropora clathrata     
     Acropora convexa     Acropora cophodactyla     Acropora copiosa     Acropora corymbosa     
Acropora crateriformis     Acropora cuneata     Acropora cylindrica     Acropora cytherea     
     Acropora danai     Acropora dendrum     Acropora derawanensis     Acropora desalwii     
Acropora digitifera     Acropora divaricata     Acropora donei     Acropora downingi     
     Acropora echinata     Acropora efflorescens     Acropora elegans     Acropora elegantula    
Acropora elizabethensis     Acropora elseyi    Acropora eurystoma     Acropora exquisita    
     Acropora fastigata     Acropora fenneri     Acropora filiformis     Acropora florida     
Acropora formosa     Acropora forskali     Acropora gemmifera     Acropora glauca     
     Acropora globiceps     Acropora gomezi     Acropora grandis     Acropora granulosa     
Acropora haimei     Acropora halmaherae     Acropora hemprichii     Acropora hoeksemai     
     Acropora horrida     Acropora humilis     Acropora hyacinthus     Acropora indiana     
Acropora indonesia     Acropora inermis     Acropora insignis     Acropora intermedia    
     Acropora irregularis     Acropora jacquelineae     Acropora japonica     Acropora kimbeensis     
Acropora kirstyae     Acropora kosurini     Acropora lamarcki     Acropora latistella     
     Acropora lianae     Acropora listeri     Acropora loisetteae     Acropora lokani    
Acropora longicyathus     Acropora loripes     Acropora lovelli     Acropora lutkeni     
     Acropora macrostoma     Acropora maryae     Acropora massawensis     Acropora meridiana     
Acropora microclados     Acropora microphthalma     Acropora millepora     Acropora minuta     
     Acropora mirabilis     Acropora monticulosa     Acropora mossambica     Acropora multiacuta     
Acropora muricata     Acropora nana     Acropora nasuta     Acropora natalensis     
     Acropora navini     Acropora nobilis     Acropora ocellata     Acropora orbicularis     
Acropora palifera     Acropora palmata     Acropora palmerae     Acropora paniculata     
     Acropora papillare     Acropora parahemprichii     Acropora parapharaonis     Acropora parilis     
Acropora pectinatus     Acropora pharaonis     Acropora pichoni     Acropora pinguis     
     Acropora plana     Acropora plantaginea     Acropora plumosa     Acropora polystoma     
Acropora prolifera     Acropora prostrata     Acropora proximalis     Acropora pruinosa     
     Acropora pulchra     Acropora rambleri     Acropora retusa     Acropora robusta     
Acropora rosaria     Acropora roseni     Acropora rudis     Acropora rufus     
     Acropora russelli     Acropora samoensis     Acropora sarmentosa     Acropora scherzeriana     
Acropora schmitti     Acropora secale     Acropora sekiseiensis     Acropora selago     
     Acropora seriata     Acropora simplex     Acropora solitaryensis     Acropora sordiensis     
Acropora spathulata     Acropora speciosa     Acropora spicifera     Acropora squarrosa     
     Acropora stoddarti     Acropora striata     Acropora subglabra     Acropora subulata     
Acropora suharsonoi     Acropora sukarnoi     Acropora tanegashimensis     Acropora tenella     
     Acropora tenuis     Acropora teres     Acropora tizardi     Acropora togianensis     
Acropora torihalimeda     Acropora torresiana     Acropora tortuosa     Acropora tumida     
     Acropora turaki     Acropora tutuilensis     Acropora valenciennesi     Acropora valida   
Acropora variabilis     Acropora variolosa     Acropora vaughani     Acropora vermiculata     
     Acropora verweyi     Acropora walindii     Acropora wallaceae     Acropora wardii     
Acropora willisae     Acropora yongei
    

So there they are all 182 known species of Acropora. Did i forget any?

Characters:Colonies are usually branching, bushy or plate-like, rarely encrusting or submassive. Corallites of two types, axial and radial. Septa are usually in two cycles. Columellae are absent. Corallite walls and the coenosteum are porous. Tentacles are usually extended only at night. J.E.N. Veron

Similar genus: Only the faviid Cyphastrea decadia and the azooxanthellate oculinid Arcohelia rediviva have similarly distinct axial and corallites. J.E.N. Veron

The growth-forms and corallite shapes of acropora. J.E.N. Veron: Acropora have a much wider range of growth-forms useful to taxonomy than other characters. Most of these forms are described by non-taxonomic terms. Two specialist terms, corymbose and caespitose are also commonly used.

arborescent: colonies concist of tree-like branches.

bottlebrush: colonies have numerous short side branchlets projecting out from the main branch.

caespitose: colonies are bushy, being composed of branches which interlock similary in three dimensions.

clumps: colonies consist of short closely compacted branches.

columnar: colonies form columns.

corymbose: colonies consist of horizontal anastomosing branches and short upright branchlets.

cushion-like: colonies consist of fine branches and grow into the shape of a cushion.

digitate: colonies consist of short, non-dividing, non-anastomosing branches like the fingers of a hand.

encrusting: colonies encrust the substrate. Most species have encrusting bases.

massive: colonies are solid and similar in size in all dimensions.

prostrate: colonies sprawl over the substrate.

staghorn: colonies primarily consist of large upright branches.

table- or plate-like: colonies are flat, either with one central leg or attached to the substrate at one side. Most tables and plates are corymbose.

thicket: colonies consist of closely compacted upright branches.


    

Edited by Kyle - June 03 2006 at 10:17am
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Acropora cerealis                                                            Acropora humilis
     
Identification of acropora species JEN Veron: Common species are usually not difficult to recognise if a well developed colony has been observed underwater. Although Acropora displays the greatest variety of growth-forms of any coral genus, only one subgenus (isopora) can be distinguished, and that only on the basis of coenosteum microstructure. In general, species of acropora may be superficially similar (for example, they form 'staghorns' or 'plates') but have different structural detail (especially the shape of radial corallites), while others are similar in structure detail but have different growth-forms. The shape and general apperance of corallites are important for identification; septal arrangements and coenosteum characters are usually much less so.

     Intraspecific latitudinal change reaches an extreme in Acropora, with the majority of species forming taxonomically meaningful geographic subspecies in subtropical (high latitude) reefs on rocky foreshores.

     Acropora can be divided into the following groups, based on a combination of growth-form and corallite characters. These groups differ from those of Veron and Wallace (1984) and wallace (1999) to increase emphasis on underwater characters as opposed to skeletal characters. Neither they, nor those used by other authors, have a well defined taxonomic basis. The most important group character(s) are in italics.
Acropora tortuosa


Group 1: Species forming solid plates and columns with no distinctive axial corallites.
Group 2: Species with thick tubular branches and immersed radial coralites.
Group 3: Species with irregular branches and prominent radial corallites.
Group 4: A buffalohorn-like species.
Group 5: An elkhorn-like species.
Group 6: Large staghorn-like species.
Group 7: Large encrusting or horizontaly branching species with rasp-like radial corallites.
Group 8: Large horizontally branching species with upturned branch ends.
Group 9: Species with interlocking basal branchesand sharp edge radial corallites.
Group 10: Species with interlocking basal branches and rounded radial corallites.
Group 11: Species with conspicuous secondary branches and smooth edged corallites.
Group 12: Small staghorn-like species.
Group 13: Species with Group 1: Species forming solid plates and columns with no distinctive axial corallites.
Group 2: Species with thick tubular branches and immersed radial coralites.
Group 3: Species with irregular branches and prominent radial corallites.
Group 4: A buffalohorn-like species.
Group 5: An elkhorn-like species.
Group 6: Large staghorn-like species.
Group 7: Large encrusting or horizontaly branching species with rasp-like radial corallites.
Group 8: Large horizontally branching species with upturned branch ends.
Group 9: Species with interlocking basal branchesand sharp edge radial corallites.
Group 10: Species with interlocking basal branches and rounded radial corallites.
Group 11: Species with conspicuous secondary branches and smooth edged corallites.
Group 12: Small staghorn-like species.
Group 13: Species with middle sized branches and sharp edged coralites.
Group 14: Species with middle sized branches and irregular radial corallites.
Group 15: Species with irregular middle sized branches interlocking branches forming compact thickets.
Group 16: Species with fine interlocking branches forming compact thickets.
Group 17: Species with flat branches and radial coralites on branch sides.
Group 18: Species forming plates and tables with robust horizontal branches.
Group 19: Species forming tables with fine horizontal branches.
Group 20: Species forming digitate clumps with cylindrical branches and distinctive radial coralites.
Group 21: Species forming digitate clumps with finger-like branches.
Group 22: Species forming digitate plates with small branchlets.
Group 23: Species forming irregular clumps with very dominant axial coralites.
Group 24: Species forming digitate clumps with spiny corallites.
Group 25: Species forming corymbose cushions and thickets with scale-like radial coralites.
Group 26: Species forming with scale-like radial corallites.
Group 27: Species forming corymbose clumps with thin branchlets and appressed radial corallites.
Group 28: Species forming corymbose clumps with diverging horizontal branches and small radial corallites.
Group 29: Species forming corymbose clumps with thin branchlets and radial corallites with flaring lips.
Group 30: Species forming corymbose plates with short compact branchlets and variable radial corallites.
Group 31: Species forming corymbose bushes or plates with elongate tubular axial corallites.
Group 32: Species forming corymbose bushes with conspicuous rounded corallites.
Group 33: Species forming bushes with irregular smooth edged radial corallites.
Group 34: Species forming bushes with sharp edged radial corallites.
Group 35: Species forming bushes with appressed radial corallites.
Group 36: Species forming thickets with fine upright branches and conspicuous radial corallites.
Group 37: Species forming tangles with delicate branches and fine radial corallites.
Group 38: Species forming bottlebrush colonies.



    
      
    
    

Edited by Kyle - June 01 2006 at 11:06am
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Acropora millepora                                                            Acropora gemmifera


Captive care Eric Borneman: Highly adaptable, Acropora can exist in turbid lagoons, wave-pounded reef crests, and calm reef flats. Many species are regularly out of water at low tide, relying on their UV-absorbing substances and heavy mucus coat to survive until the water levels rise again. They tolerate huge differences in light intensity, water movement, and even salinity, as shallow, protected reefs become exposed to tremendous downfalls and land-based rainwater runoff. The amount of research and description on the Acropora genus alone could fill a small library, and their forms intrigue both underwater observers and aquarium hobbyists alike.

      Given the recent evolutionary success of these corals in demanding reef conditions, it would be expected that one could virtually ship them in an envelope across continents, place the corals in a pitcher of saltwater, and have them grow. Yet nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, they are very demanding in captivity. By the same token, they are consistently found in dozens of studies to be some of the most sensitive species in tolerating temperature change, sedimentation, and other chemical and environmental stresses that are outside their normal conditions. However, once a certain critical acclimation period has been passed, and if stable conditions are present, Acropora will thrive!

     When selecting wild Acropora, the presence of axial corallites should be noted. This will signify that the coral is or was from a rapidly growing area of the colony and has not been removed from an interior area of the colony where growth rates were limited. Broown tips, where the axial corallite has become indistinguishable from the radial corallites, do not grow as well in terms of branch extension, though infilling and radial growth may still occur. A new axial corallite can develop under favorable conditions, but as a metabolic cost to the coral that may not be feasible with newly placed specimens, many such examples fail to thrive in their new environment.

     In general, Acropora species with thick branches are reported to be more difficult to keep than those with thin branches, probably due to an inability of the captive environment to provide enough water flow. Furthermore, many thick-branched species seem more prone, initally, to problems. Brown specimens, bottlebrush types, and thin-branched types seem to be somewhat more "tolerant" as they are typically from lower water flow and light conditions. Tabletop-type Acropora species are among the most difficult to keep, with the traditional staghorn varities somewhere in between.

     Captive-bred specimens are generally healthier and much easier to care for than wild-caught colonies. Nonetheless, all Acropora seem to prefer a strong, random, mixing-type current for maximum health and growth, high levels of calcium and (anecdotally) strontium, and intense lighting. Very few species, except perhaps captive-bred colonies, will tolerate moderate lighting and water flow. Water parameters should also be excellent. It is not advisable to keep Acropora in new tanks, as the stability of a mature tank offers a much higher chance of success.

      Acropora suffer from many maladies, including certain predatory animals they harbor within their branches. Others harbor commensal crabs and shrimp, which are symbiotic in offering protection to the coral from predation. Quite a number of fishes and other animals prey exclusively on acroporid tissue. Acropora need careful acclimation so that they are not shocked by light or water-parameter changes, yet they must be placed in their final position quickly enough to avoid stress or unfulfilled metabolic needs. Such stresses include low light and water current, as well as movement from position to position. Acropora do not tolerate any sudden changes in tank conditions, and they may bleach, die, recede, or rapidly waste away if stability is not maintained.
    

    
All right that`s it this week!
Lets see your ACRO PICS PEOPLE!!!!
    

Edited by Kyle - June 04 2006 at 1:40am
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