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  1. Why some corals are better off dead - The Washington Post

  2. Coral Catastrophe in the Venezuelan Caribbean | Pulitzer Center

  3. Cornus stolonifera kelseyi's dwarf | Tuinplantencentrum De Pauw

  4. Shadows over Caribbean reefs: Identification of a new ... - bioRxiv

  5. Why Some Corals are Better Off Dead | Pulitzer Center

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    But here in Venezuela, reefs face a different kind of lethal threat: Unomia stolonifera, an invasive coral species that is smothering native varieties. Hailing from Indonesia, the slimy cauliflower-looking coral has expanded across the shores of four states in Venezuela, covering at least some 1,000 square miles.
    Unomia Stolonifera carpets the seabed off the coast of Valle Seco in Aragua, Venezuela. (Video: Camille Rodriguez Montilla) She is part of a team of biologists, chemists, villagers, and entrepreneurs fighting to keep Unomia at bay. It’s a battle they’re waging with limited tools.
    Nomenclature: Until recently, the name Cornus stolonifera, described by Michaux in 1803, was applied to North American specimens of Cornus sericea. These two names have been shown to belong to the same species, C. sericea, first described by Linnaeus in 1771. Leaves: Opposite, simple, pinnately-veined, petiolate.
    northernontarioflora.ca
    “At this point, it is almost certain that it will invade the entirety of the Caribbean,” says Villamizar, a tropical ecology professor at the Central University of Venezuela. Unomia Stolonifera carpets the seabed off the coast of Valle Seco in Aragua, Venezuela.
  7. Why Some Corals are Better Off Dead | Pulitzer Center

  8. "Why Some Corals Are Better Off Dead" | SEJ

  9. Foraminifera - The World Foraminifera Database - WoRMS

  10. Foraminifera - The World Foraminifera Database - WoRMS

  11. Cornus stolonifera - Northern Ontario Plant Database

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