Coral - Definition. Was ist Coral
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Was (wer) ist Coral - definition

PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
CORAL66; CORAL66 language; CORAL 66; CORAL66 programming language; CORAL 66 programming language; CORAL-66; Coral 64; CORAL 64; Coral 66

coral         
  • Navajo]] (Native American), ca. 1920s, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • pmc = 5603060}}</ref>
  • 50px
  • 25}}<small>AMP = antimicrobial peptides, ROS = reactive oxygen species</small>
  • Life cycles of broadcasters and brooders
  • A coral outcrop on the [[Great Barrier Reef]], Australia
  • Anatomy of a stony coral polyp
  • Locations of coral reefs around the world
  • Global sea surface temperature (SST)
  • [[Staghorn coral]] (''Acropora cervicornis'') is an important hermatypic coral from the Caribbean
  • Generalized life cycle of corals via sexual reproduction: Colonies release gametes in clusters (1) which float to the surface (2) then disperse and fertilize eggs (3). Embryos become planulae (4) and can settle onto a surface (5). They then metamorphose into a juvenile polyp (6) which then matures and reproduces asexually to form a colony (7, 8).
  • – [[Smithsonian Institution]]<ref>[https://www.flickr.com/photos/ideonexus/albums/72157603838941938 Smithsonian National Museum] ''flickr''.</ref>}}
  • ''[[Montastraea cavernosa]]'' polyps with tentacles extended
  • Basal plates (calices) of ''[[Orbicella annularis]]'' showing multiplication by budding (small central plate) and division (large double plate)
  • ''Porites lutea''
  • A healthy coral reef has a striking level of biodiversity in many forms of marine life.
  • 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00341}}.</ref>}}
  • A male [[great star coral]], ''Montastraea cavernosa'', releasing sperm into the water.
  • 10.3389/fcimb.2014.00176}}.</ref>}}
  • This dragon-eye zoanthid is a popular source of color in reef tanks.
MARINE INVERTEBRATES OF THE CLASS ANTHOZOA
Corals; Coral mound; Coral biology; Coral Biology; Coral heads; Poypifer; Polypifer; Fossilized coral; Coral colonies; Coral skeleton; Intracellular symbiont; Evolution of coral; Coral microbiome; Coral holobiont; 🪸; Fossil coral; Coral colony; Coral microbiomes
(corals)
1.
Coral is a hard substance formed from the bones of very small sea animals. It is often used to make jewellery.
The women have elaborate necklaces of turquoise and pink coral.
N-VAR
2.
Corals are very small sea animals.
N-COUNT
3.
Something that is coral is dark orangey-pink in colour.
...coral lipstick.
...the coral-colored flower buds.
COLOUR
coral         
  • Navajo]] (Native American), ca. 1920s, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • pmc = 5603060}}</ref>
  • 50px
  • 25}}<small>AMP = antimicrobial peptides, ROS = reactive oxygen species</small>
  • Life cycles of broadcasters and brooders
  • A coral outcrop on the [[Great Barrier Reef]], Australia
  • Anatomy of a stony coral polyp
  • Locations of coral reefs around the world
  • Global sea surface temperature (SST)
  • [[Staghorn coral]] (''Acropora cervicornis'') is an important hermatypic coral from the Caribbean
  • Generalized life cycle of corals via sexual reproduction: Colonies release gametes in clusters (1) which float to the surface (2) then disperse and fertilize eggs (3). Embryos become planulae (4) and can settle onto a surface (5). They then metamorphose into a juvenile polyp (6) which then matures and reproduces asexually to form a colony (7, 8).
  • – [[Smithsonian Institution]]<ref>[https://www.flickr.com/photos/ideonexus/albums/72157603838941938 Smithsonian National Museum] ''flickr''.</ref>}}
  • ''[[Montastraea cavernosa]]'' polyps with tentacles extended
  • Basal plates (calices) of ''[[Orbicella annularis]]'' showing multiplication by budding (small central plate) and division (large double plate)
  • ''Porites lutea''
  • A healthy coral reef has a striking level of biodiversity in many forms of marine life.
  • 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00341}}.</ref>}}
  • A male [[great star coral]], ''Montastraea cavernosa'', releasing sperm into the water.
  • 10.3389/fcimb.2014.00176}}.</ref>}}
  • This dragon-eye zoanthid is a popular source of color in reef tanks.
MARINE INVERTEBRATES OF THE CLASS ANTHOZOA
Corals; Coral mound; Coral biology; Coral Biology; Coral heads; Poypifer; Polypifer; Fossilized coral; Coral colonies; Coral skeleton; Intracellular symbiont; Evolution of coral; Coral microbiome; Coral holobiont; 🪸; Fossil coral; Coral colony; Coral microbiomes
¦ noun
1. a hard stony substance secreted by certain colonial marine animals as an external skeleton, typically forming large reefs.
precious red coral, used in jewellery.
2. the pinkish-red colour of red coral.
3. an anthozoan of a large group including those that form coral reefs, secreting a calcareous, horny, or soft skeleton. [Orders Scleractinia or Madreporaria (the reef-forming stony corals), Alcyonacea (soft corals), and Gorgonacea (horny corals).]
4. the edible unfertilized roe of a lobster or scallop, reddening when cooked.
Derivatives
coralloid adjective (chiefly Biology & Zoology).
Origin
ME: via OFr. from L. corallum, from Gk korallion, kouralion.
CORAL         
  • Navajo]] (Native American), ca. 1920s, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • pmc = 5603060}}</ref>
  • 50px
  • 25}}<small>AMP = antimicrobial peptides, ROS = reactive oxygen species</small>
  • Life cycles of broadcasters and brooders
  • A coral outcrop on the [[Great Barrier Reef]], Australia
  • Anatomy of a stony coral polyp
  • Locations of coral reefs around the world
  • Global sea surface temperature (SST)
  • [[Staghorn coral]] (''Acropora cervicornis'') is an important hermatypic coral from the Caribbean
  • Generalized life cycle of corals via sexual reproduction: Colonies release gametes in clusters (1) which float to the surface (2) then disperse and fertilize eggs (3). Embryos become planulae (4) and can settle onto a surface (5). They then metamorphose into a juvenile polyp (6) which then matures and reproduces asexually to form a colony (7, 8).
  • – [[Smithsonian Institution]]<ref>[https://www.flickr.com/photos/ideonexus/albums/72157603838941938 Smithsonian National Museum] ''flickr''.</ref>}}
  • ''[[Montastraea cavernosa]]'' polyps with tentacles extended
  • Basal plates (calices) of ''[[Orbicella annularis]]'' showing multiplication by budding (small central plate) and division (large double plate)
  • ''Porites lutea''
  • A healthy coral reef has a striking level of biodiversity in many forms of marine life.
  • 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00341}}.</ref>}}
  • A male [[great star coral]], ''Montastraea cavernosa'', releasing sperm into the water.
  • 10.3389/fcimb.2014.00176}}.</ref>}}
  • This dragon-eye zoanthid is a popular source of color in reef tanks.
MARINE INVERTEBRATES OF THE CLASS ANTHOZOA
Corals; Coral mound; Coral biology; Coral Biology; Coral heads; Poypifer; Polypifer; Fossilized coral; Coral colonies; Coral skeleton; Intracellular symbiont; Evolution of coral; Coral microbiome; Coral holobiont; 🪸; Fossil coral; Coral colony; Coral microbiomes
1. Class Oriented Ring Associated Language. 2. A deductive database and logic programming system based on Horn-clause rules with extensions like SQL's group-by and aggregation operators. CORAL was developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It is implemented in C++ and has a Prolog-like syntax. Many evaluation techniques are supported, including {bottom-up fixpoint evaluation} and top-down backtracking. Modules are separately compiled; different evaluation methods can be used in different modules within a single program. Disk-resident data is supported via an interface to the Exodus storage manager. There is an on-line help facility. It requires AT&T C++ 2.0 (or G++ soon) and runs on Decstation and Sun-4. ftp://ftp.cs.wisc.edu/. (1993-01-29)

Wikipedia

CORAL

CORAL, short for Computer On-line Real-time Applications Language is a programming language originally developed in 1964 at the Royal Radar Establishment (RRE), Malvern, Worcestershire, in the United Kingdom. The R was originally for "radar", not "real-time". It was influenced primarily by JOVIAL, and thus ALGOL, but is not a subset of either.

The most widely-known version, CORAL 66, was subsequently developed by I. F. Currie and M. Griffiths under the auspices of the Inter-Establishment Committee for Computer Applications (IECCA). Its official definition, edited by Woodward, Wetherall, and Gorman, was first published in 1970.

In 1971, CORAL was selected by the Ministry of Defence as the language for future military applications and to support this, a standardization program was introduced to ensure CORAL compilers met the specifications. This process was later adopted by the US Department of Defense while defining Ada.

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für Coral
1. Climate Change — the result of excessive carbon emissions — leads to coral bleaching and possible coral death.
2. A February NOAA report calculates '6 percent of lettuce coral, '3 percent of the star coral and nearly 61 percent of the iconic brain coral in St.
3. Brain and star coral was toppled and smashed into other coral heads.
4. Prolonged coral bleaching (more than a week) can lead to coral death and the subsequent loss of coral reef habitats for a range of marine life.
5. Meanwhile, Coral International Hotels, Resorts & Spas opened Coral Boutique Villas, Al–Barsha in Dubai.