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Staff Article
We have all heard about the reef, its fragility and its beauty, but just exactly what is it? Where did it come from? Why do we call it a “living” reef? The reef, properly named the Florida Reef, is made up of layers of calcium carbonate secreted by coral polyps over a period of several thousand years. The polyp is tiny and soft-bodied. New polyps are constantly being grown by the reef, but at the rate of only about one half inch per year. Each polyp contains algae called zooxanthellae, which gives coral its color. The zooxanthellae takes in carbon dioxide, processes it and gives off oxygen that the polyp needs to stay alive and create coral.
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