Dang, I'm horrible at i.d. pretty good at knowing when something is dying thoughIt's a camera with a top-down porthole, I think.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Dang, I'm horrible at i.d. pretty good at knowing when something is dying thoughIt's a camera with a top-down porthole, I think.
Been playing around with my Macro and the Avast Marine porthole. Quiz is self explanatory, can you give me the genus (and species or marketing name if you’re extra smart) of these SPS corals. Hint: all but two are a different genus.
A
B
C
D
E
F
@ISpeakForTheSeas i know coral isn’t your thing but thought you may enjoy. No pressure
They look surprisingly like mini Euphyllia tentacles to me.Got it!
Was shocked to see the polyp tentacles(?) were multicolored!
The genus Pavona is also polyphyletic, being congener to Leptoseris and Gardineroseris, so different Pavona might not be able to be placed together either. In addition to this, the species level is the only taxonomic rank with an official definition, so what constitutes as a genus, family, etc. is mostly based on vibes. Of course, the taxa still have to be monophyletic, but how large of a clade can included in a taxon is up to the taxonomist. A coral scientist I know gave a good analogy for this: "We're probably more closely related to chimpanzees than Favites is to Echinopora."Now that I know that freak hair pavona isn’t actually pavona it explains why my other pavona is killing it.
I’ve heard that too. In fact I thought I heard some jellyfish in the same genus are less related then humans and lizards or something like that.The genus Pavona is also polyphyletic, being congener to Leptoseris and Gardineroseris, so different Pavona might not be able to be placed together either. In addition to this, the species level is the only taxonomic rank with an official definition, so what constitutes as a genus, family, etc. is mostly based on vibes. Of course, the taxa still have to be monophyletic, but how large of a clade can included in a taxon is up to the taxonomist. A coral scientist I know gave a good analogy for this: "We're probably more closely related to chimpanzees than Favites is to Echinopora."
Hahaha! I'm not a pro and I did decent. I think I missed 2?Us regular people like to see the pros outside their comfort zone, learning like us!!