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  9. The bamboo octocoral Isidella sp.

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The bamboo octocoral Isidella sp.

Media Photo/Video

April 23, 2024

Diagonal bright red lines with blue dots attached against completely black background.
download Download ab1_-_branched_bamboo_coral_3689_7-25-09_jsl_0589.jpg

Two corals displaying bioluminescence in the Bahamas in 2009.

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A bioluminescent shape, sort of like a firework, against a black background.

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Deep-sea coral Iridogorgia sp.

04.23.2024
Small light blue dots in lines against black background.

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Shaggy bamboo octocoral Isidella tentaculum

04.23.2024
Large red dots, with attached small blue dots against completely black background.

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The colonial false gold coral Savalia sp.

04.23.2024
Groupings of sea floor corals, in various shapes, sizes, and textures.

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A diversity of bamboo corals and golden corals in the central Pacific Ocean.

04.23.2024
Four small corals with dark centers and long spokes float against light colored ocean floor.

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The deep sea pen Umbellula sp.

04.23.2024
A hollow circle coral with long, thin pieces coming out from it in a spoke.

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A magnificent coral Iridogorgia magnispiralis

04.23.2024

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A keratoisidid bamboo coral

04.23.2024

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A coral known as Metallogorgia melanotrichos

04.23.2024

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A diversity of golden corals and bamboo corals in the central Pacific Ocean off Hawaii.

04.23.2024

Related Content

  • Bioluminescence First Evolved in Animals at Least 540 Million Years Ago

    Bioluminescence first evolved in animals at least 540 million years ago in a group of marine invertebrates called octocorals, according to the results of a new study from scientists with the Smiths

    • April 23, 2024
    • News Release
    • Natural History Museum
    • Research News
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