Reef Basics
Species of Koh Tao
Reef Ecology
Threats to Koh Tao’s Reefs
Advanced Reef Science
100

These tiny animals live in colonies and form the basic structure of a coral reef.

Coral polyps

100

This shark species is commonly seen around Koh Tao dive sites like Chumphon Pinnacle.

Whale shark

100

This type of relationship describes the close interaction between coral and zooxanthellae, where both benefit.

Mutualism
(Also acceptable: Symbiosis)

100

This global phenomenon is causing rising sea temperatures that stress coral reefs.

Climate change

100

This term describes the immense variety of life forms found living within a coral reef ecosystem.

Biodiversity

200

These symbiotic algae live inside coral tissue and give corals their color.

Zooxanthellae

200

This species of sea turtle is frequently seen around Koh Tao reefs.

A green sea turtle
(Also acceptable: A hawksbill sea turtle)

200

This type of ecological relationship benefits one organism while the other is neither helped nor harmed.

Commensalism

200

This type of local diver or snorkeler behavior can physically damage coral reefs.

Physical contact
(Acceptable: touching coral, kicking with fins, anchor damage)

200

Corals that build reefs are classified in this biological class of animals.

Class: Anthozoa 

Phylum: Cnidaria

Order: Scleractinia 

300

This type of coral has large, fleshy polyps and lacks the rigid calcium carbonate skeleton found in reef-building corals.

Soft coral

300

This small reef fish removes parasites from larger fish at cleaning stations.

Cleaner wrasse

300

In addition to grazing algae, parrotfish contribute to reefs through this process of breaking down coral and producing sand.

Bioerosion

300

This type of land-based pollution increases nutrient levels and can lead to algal blooms on reefs.

Runoff 

300

This ecological concept describes a reef’s ability to resist damage and recover after disturbances like bleaching events.

Reef resilience

400

This type of reef formation surrounds Koh Tao - fringing, barrier, or atoll.

A fringing reef

400

Population outbreaks of this echinoderm can devastate coral reefs.

Crown of Thorns Starfish

400

This term describes a specific reef location where cleaner organisms remove parasites from larger marine animals.

Cleaning station

400

This process lowers ocean pH and reduces corals’ ability to build calcium carbonate skeletons.

Ocean acidification
400

The biological process where a heterotrophic organism consumes algae, digests the cytoplasm, and retains the functional chloroplasts within its own cells to perform photosynthesis. These "stolen" plastids allow the host to gain energy from sunlight, acting as "solar-powered" organisms.

Kleptoplasty

500

This chemical compound is the primary material corals use to build their skeletons.

Calcium carbonate (CaCO₃)

500

This large reef-dwelling bivalve contains symbiotic algae similar to those found in corals.

Giant Clams

500

Herbivorous fish are critical for reef resilience after bleaching events because they

Prevent algae from overgrowing and outcompeting recovering corals

500

This human activity accelerates reef decline by removing algae-grazing fish.

Overfishing 

500

These specialized, stinging organelles located on coral tentacles are used for defense, prey capture, and aggression

Nematocysts

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