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Coral is neither an animal nor a plant, it is a build-up of feces pulled by polyps.
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Neither animals nor plants.
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Plants Plants inside the water.
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Animal.
Many people think that corals are plants because most of the corals do not move, and many of them are branch-shaped, and most of the corals rely on the symbiotic single-celled algae in the body to provide energy for photosynthesis, so it is indeed very similar to plants, and the scientific community has quarreled for a long time one or two hundred years ago, but it is indeed an animal.
Although corals are animals, they have symbiotic algae in their bodies, and even the color of the coral is mainly provided by which symbiotic algae, and 90% of the food is also provided by which symbiotic algae. So it can be very complicated to say that corals are stones, polyps are animals, and the symbiotic algae in the polyps are plants. They rely mainly on the symbiotic plants that feed them, and then the animals make the corals, which make up the coral reefs.
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Corals and sea cucumbers are all animals.
The main aspects that distinguish plants from animals are:
The first is to see if there is life activity, which is very important, and only if there is life can it be said that it is a plant or a living thing.
Looking at its assimilation method, plants are generally autotrophic and can use light sources, which belongs to the photoautotrophic type.
Then it depends on whether its cell structure has a cell wall and whether there are chloroplasts (most plants still have vacuoles, general plants and microorganisms (especially bacteria) have more cell walls, and animals generally do not have chloroplasts and cell walls. with organelles that plants do not have such as centrosomes).
In addition, depending on the degree of differentiation, plants do not have organs, and the tissues are relatively simple (there are no higher consciousness tissues such as nervous tissues), while most animals have perfect organs and complex tissues.
And there is. Coral above.
If you talk about polyps, it's an animal, but if it's a coral reef, it's not, and a coral reef isn't even a living thing.
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Corals are animals. While corals are often thought of as plants on the seafloor, they are actually invertebrates that belong to the phylum cnidarians and share similar characteristics to creatures such as jellyfish and rocky anemones. The body of a coral is made up of many individuals, known as polyps, which have a mouth and tentacles and can survive by ingesting planktonic jujube searches.
The main body of the reef is made up of polyps. The polyp is a coelenterate in the ocean, which feeds on the small plankton in the ocean, and can absorb calcium and carbon dioxide from the seawater as it grows, and then secrete limestone, which becomes its own shell. Each individual polyp is the size of a grain of rice, and they live in groups of co-packs, metabolizing, growing and reproducing from generation to generation, while secreting limestone and bonding together. >>>More
Coral is a general term in coelenterates, and in daily life, people call it "coral" if it has a strange shape, delicate and transparent and comes from seafood, and all "red" people are collectively called "red coral". Corals typically include soft corals, gorgonians, red corals, stony corals, horn corals, hydra corals, blue corals, and sheng corals. Soft sea gills (pennatulacea) and colony anemones (zoantharian) are also mistakenly referred to as "corals". >>>More
Coral is an animal, not a plant, and the friend above explained it comprehensively. >>>More
Animal, because it has the most basic structure of an animal.
Mushrooms are fungi that belong to the genus for living things. >>>More