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Think of the word "corals." What images come to mind? If you are like most people, you envision vivid, colorful mounds of impressive brain and staghorn corals: the kind of corals that make up tropical, shallow-water reefs like the Great Barrier Reef. But what about corals in the deep? There are corals that live in much deeper, colder waters—where there is no sunlight—and that's what this mission is about.
-From "Deep-water Connections: Octocorals at the Southern Distribution Limits" by NOAA.gov
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Most corals are vivid and colorful, such as brain and staghorn corals.
The Great Barrier Reef is one of the world's most famous coral reefs.
Most people think of colorful, shallow water corals in the tropics.
Corals also exist in the deep water where the sunlight does not reach.
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