File:Thecosmilia Annularis (fossil Scleractinian Coral) (Jurassic; Weymouth, England) (35396422650).jpg
Scleractinians are significant reef-building organisms in Earth's warm, shallow oceans. They first appear in the Triassic and are the only group of stony corals in modern oceans (in the Paleozoic, tabulates and rugosans were the principal stony coral groups). Scleractinian corals consist of individuals or colonies of gelatinous polyps that secrete hard calcareous (CaCO3) skeletons. Most live in warm, tropical to subtropical, photic zone environments (the shallow portions of the world’s oceans where sunlight penetrates). Scleractinian corals are predators - they have stinging cells (nematocysts) in their tentacles that paralyze prey. They also obtain sustenance from microbes called zooxanthellae (usually dinoflagellates) that live in their tissues and need to be in sunlight to manufacture food by photosynthesis. The food is shared with the host coral animal.
Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Scleractinia, Montlivaltiidae or Stylophyllidae
Stratigraphy: unrecorded/undisclosed Jurassic unit (but possibly from the Coral Rag Formation, Corallian Group, Upper Jurassic)
Locality: unrecorded/undisclosed site near Weymouth, Dorset, southwestern Britain