enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Coral reef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral_reef

    Coral reefs deliver ecosystem services for tourism, fisheries and shoreline protection. The annual global economic value of coral reefs has been estimated at anywhere from US$30–375 billion (1997 and 2003 estimates) [ 14 ] [ 15 ] to US$2.7 trillion (a 2020 estimate) [ 16 ] to US$9.9 trillion (a 2014 estimate).

  3. Marine coastal ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_coastal_ecosystem

    The ecosystem services provided by intact reefs, seagrasses, and mangroves are both highly valuable and mutually enhance each other. Coastal protection (storm/wave attenuation) maintains the structure of adjacent ecosystems, and associated ecosystem services, in an offshore-to-onshore direction.

  4. Marine ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_ecosystem

    Ecosystem services delivered by epibenthic bivalve reefs. Reefs provide coastal protection through erosion control and shoreline stabilization, and modify the physical landscape by ecosystem engineering, thereby providing habitat for species by facilitative interactions with other habitats such as tidal flat benthic communities, seagrasses and ...

  5. Corallivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corallivore

    A corallivore is an animal that feeds on coral. Corallivores are an important group of reef organism because they can influence coral abundance, distribution, and community structure. Corallivores feed on coral using a variety of unique adaptations and strategies.

  6. Census of Coral Reefs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Census_of_Coral_Reefs

    The Census of Coral Reefs (CReefs) is a field project of the Census of Marine Life that surveys the biodiversity of coral reef ecosystems internationally. The project works to study what species live in coral reef ecosystems, to develop standardized protocols for studying coral reef ecosystems, and to increase access to and exchange of information about coral reefs scattered throughout the globe.

  7. Marine habitat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_habitat

    This additional level of variety in the environment is beneficial to many types of coral reef animals, which for example may feed in the sea grass and use the reefs for protection or breeding. [32] Coastal habitats are the most visible marine habitats, but they are not the only important marine habitats.

  8. Coral reef fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral_reef_fish

    Coral reefs contain the most diverse fish assemblages to be found anywhere on earth, with perhaps as many as 6,000–8,000 species dwelling within coral reef ecosystems of the world's oceans. [ 3 ] The mechanisms that first led to, and continue to maintain, such concentrations of fish species on coral reefs has been widely debated over the last ...

  9. Ecosystem service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem_service

    An example of an ecosystem service is pollination, here by a honey bee on avocado crop. Ecosystem services are the various benefits that humans derive from healthy ecosystems. These ecosystems, when functioning well, offer such things as provision of food, natural pollination of crops, clean air and water, decomposition of wastes, or flood ...