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Risk & MacGeachy, 1978

Aspects of bioerosion of modern Caribbean reefs

Risk, M. J., MacGeachy, J. K.
DOI
DOI10.15517/rev.biol.trop..v26iS1.1978
Year1978
Volume26
NumberS1
Pages85-105
Typearticle in journal
OpenAccess
LitsentsCC BY 4.0
LanguageEnglish
Id51528

Abstract

Boring organisms are ubiquitous and destructive on modern reefs, and have an extensive fossil record. In modern reefs, representatives of at least eight different phyla are capable of boring into the reef framework. Cellular-grade Monera (bacteria) and tissue-grade Protista (algae and fungí) erode via chemical secretions. Tissue-grade Metazoa (the sponges) use a unique combination of chemical weakening combined with physical removal. Organ-grade Metazoa (polychaetes, bivalves, barnacles, crustaceans, sipunculids) employ a variety of techniques, ranging from the chemicalIy-assisted physical to the purely physical.

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