Brain coral with intricate mazelike patterns.
Not exact matches
And the reefs where we snorkeled, their bright staghorns cracked and bleaching, lobotomized,
with brain corals stacked like bowling balls among the palm trees...
Give your children an unforgettable experience — snorkel or scuba dive the crystal - clear, warm waters of the Florida Keys to view the only living
coral reef in the continental U.S. Head to John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park and the adjacent Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, where kids can see brain corals and sea fans up - close and swim with rays, turtles and tropical
coral reef in the continental U.S. Head to John Pennekamp
Coral Reef State Park and the adjacent Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, where kids can see brain corals and sea fans up - close and swim with rays, turtles and tropical
Coral Reef State Park and the adjacent Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, where kids can see
brain corals and sea fans up - close and swim
with rays, turtles and tropical fish.
Both offer dense growths of
brain and star
coral,
with slopes and walls that drop well past 100 feet, and include volcanic formations such as clefts and ridges that add interest to the terrain.
These hulking hard -
coral castles are topped
with staghorn, elkhorn and
brain coral growth, and decorated in a colorful array of gorgonians and sponges.
Here large heads of common smooth star, smooth and depressed
brain corals and yellow porous
coral form isolated growths that are surrounded by
coral rubble, much of which is coated
with red algae.
Wide chutes lead to a wall covered
with yellow tube sponges, purple sea whips and
brain coral.
A beautiful dive site
with beautiful
brain corals and gorgonians all around.
The reef is made of such interesting architecture it seems to have been designed by a mastermind: expanding fans, rolling
brain coral, color dappled arches, rivers of wrasse, swim - throughs shimmering
with tiny glittering silver sides can simply be summed as magical.
The reef - flat features many small boulders of lesser star and
brain corals, interspersed
with clusters of staghorn
corals, all covered in colourful reef - fish like chromis, wrasse, parrotfish and surgeonfish.
There's elkhorn
coral mixed
with staghorn and
brain coral and beautiful fish.
That these
coral seem to function in a manner aggressively towards each other may help explain why, although we have big
brains, we continue to take over each others land and war
with each other around the world.