Stitchin' Fish is knittin' coral

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Bubblegum coral (Paragorgia arborea) never looked so... cuddly. It's amazing. Who would believe someone could knit a sea fan and do it so well? Ecology Action Center in Halifax brings a unique perspective to the deep coral movement. They go straight to the fishermen for the information that counts, rather than waiting for science to answer important questions about deep-coral distribution and collateral impacts to coral from destructive fishing gear. That, and they're knitting the benthos back together one species at a time.

While scientists have only recently begun to learn about cold-water corals, fishermen along the continental shelf have been aware of their existence for generations. Known to bottom hook-and-line fishermen in Nova Scotia as "trees," Paragorgia arborea and Primnoa resedaeformis, among other species, have long been regarded as vital fish habitat.

Check out Stitchin' Fish: The Bubblegum Years

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This is the second in a series of five referenced articles about shared characteristics between deep and shallow water corals
Coral is a polyphyletic term for polypoid animals in the cnidarian classes Anthozoa and Hydrozoa that secrete either 1) a black, horn like proteinaceous axis or 2) carbonate skeletal material in the form of either a) continuous skeleton or b) an assemblage of microscopic, individual sclerites (Ca

Yay! Science Knitting!!!

By microbiologychick (not verified) on 29 Apr 2008 #permalink