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Introduction to Marine Biology
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How to Identify Coral QUIZ
Due April 14, 2026 at 9:00 AM · 5 multiple-choice questions · Practice quiz
1. Growth forms such as branching vs. plating vs. massive often reflect:
Random genetics with zero influence from the environment
Physical setting—waves, surge, and light—plus species tendencies
Fish choosing English names for colonies
Sand grain color on the beach only
2. Coral polyps mainly capture small prey using:
Roots drilled into bedrock
Tentacles armed with stinging cells (nematocysts)
Internal jaws made of metal
Loud whistles at night
3. Why is body color alone a weak way to identify coral?
Corals cannot reflect any wavelengths
Bleaching, algae films, and lighting change appearance quickly
Every species shares identical pigments worldwide
Photographs are never allowed on reefs
4. Corallites are best described as:
Fish nests dug in mud
Cup-like skeletal features that typically hold individual polyps
Floating drift algae
Types of seagrass roots
5. A helpful identification habit when surveying is to:
Ignore depth, surge, and sun angle
Record depth, light direction, and scale in photos when permitted
Touch every colony repeatedly to test softness
Collect samples without permits if you are fast
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