Concepts

Types of Coral Reefs

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectGeography

Definition

The three classic forms of coral reef, distinguished by their position relative to the coast and the presence of a lagoon, first explained in a single subsidence theory by Charles Darwin.

Key points

  • Fringing reef: grows directly along and attached to the shore (or with only a very narrow, shallow lagoon), the most common and youngest type; example, reefs of the Gulf of Mannar in India.
  • Barrier reef: a broad reef lying offshore, separated from the coast by a wide, deep lagoon; the Great Barrier Reef off Queensland, Australia, is the largest in the world.
  • Atoll: a roughly circular or horseshoe-shaped ring of reef enclosing a central lagoon, typically built on a sinking volcanic island; the Lakshadweep islands of India are atolls.
  • Darwin's subsidence theory links the three: as a volcanic island slowly sinks while the coral grows upward, a fringing reef becomes a barrier reef and finally an atoll once the island disappears.
  • Reefs need warm (about 20 to 25° Celsius), shallow, clear, sunlit, saline tropical water; warming seas cause coral bleaching (loss of symbiotic algae).

Why it matters for CAPF

The fringing-barrier-atoll triad, Darwin's subsidence theory linking them, the Great Barrier Reef and Lakshadweep atolls, and reef growth conditions are recurring oceanography facts.

Common confusion

Fringing (attached to shore) versus barrier (offshore with a wide deep lagoon) versus atoll (ring around a lagoon, no central island); the order of evolution is fringing then barrier then atoll as the land subsides.

One-line recall

Three reef types: fringing (shore-attached), barrier (offshore with deep lagoon), atoll (ring around a lagoon), linked by Darwin's subsidence theory.

Parent note

oceanography

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