Madrepora (Spanish, "mother of pores") is a genus of stony corals, often found forming reefs or islands in tropical locations. The names Madrepore and Madreporaria were formerly applied universally to any stony coral of the family Scleractinia. They reproduce in three separate ways, as discovered by the marine zoologist Anne Thynne (1800–1866). It is commonly known as horn coral. A colony is branched with small polyps in cylindrical cups separated by a perforated coenosteum. Terminal polyps bear six tentacles, while lateral polyps bear twelve tentacles. Madrepora is economically important, sin
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Madrepora (Spanish, "mother of pores") is a genus of stony corals, often found forming reefs or islands in tropical locations. The names Madrepore and Madreporaria were formerly applied universally to any stony coral of the family Scleractinia. They reproduce in three separate ways, as discovered by the marine zoologist Anne Thynne (1800–1866). It is commonly known as horn coral. A colony is branched with small polyps in cylindrical cups separated by a perforated coenosteum. Terminal polyps bear six tentacles, while lateral polyps bear twelve tentacles. Madrepora is economically important, since it contributes to the formation of coral reefs.
==Species== Species include: Madrepora arbuscula (Moseley, 1881) Madrepora astroites Forskål, 1775 Madrepora carolina (Pourtalès, 1871) Madrepora minutiseptum Cairns & Zibrowius, 1997 Madrepora oculata Linnaeus, 1758 Madrepora porcellana (Moseley, 1881) †Madrepora trochiformis Pallas, 1766
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).