What is the crown of the stars?
Star star Crown-of-Torns is a large starfish originally from tropical and subtropical waters where it favors to live on coral reefs and around. These starfish have a remarkable look due to their amount of spines and have increased significantly from the 70s. The jump in the population of the starry crown from Toryns is credited to several factors, including a decline in natural predators and an increase in outflow rich in nutrients near the coast. The starfish of the crown can grow as a tire size, with 12-19 arms radiating from its center and starfish sometimes combine forces to become particularly impressive. The distinguishing spine attached to the crown of Thorns starfish contain a neurotoxin that can cause dullness, swelling and infection if the intervention is not completely removed, so the starfish is very unpleasant for di.vers. However,
the belts are only the tip of the iceberg. The preference diet of the crown of the crown is coral and thanks to the growing population these starfish are seriously damaging already vulnerable coral reefs after CElém world. Many biologists are afraid that the proliferation of the Thorns Crown Starrot could lead to extensive and irreparable damage, and in some regions the cliffs were almost completely destroyed by these diseases by sea creatures.
The steering of star fish population on the crown is very difficult. These creatures tend to do well in nitrogen -rich outflows, as many rivers have transferred in the industrial world. This drain also feeds on eyelash flowers, which tend to choke other marine species and create a dead zone in which the starfish can be Crown-Torns. In addition, natural predators of the starfish are Crown-Thorns, due to extensive hunting and habitat damage.
In some regions, divers took the problem in their hands, operated the monitoring teams and tried to check the population with a regular starfish killing. These groups also supported the protection of starfish predators and offer vzMaking members of public and scientific organizations that are interested in the problem.
If you happen to dive in the tropics and notice a particularly large, barbed star, be careful. You should avoid contact with the spine, and if you accidentally enter or touch the starfish of the crown, you will immediately appear to get medical attention.