While most fire corals are yellow or orange, they can also be found in shades of brown, green, and even blue, providing a vibrant display underwater. Fire coral has several common growth forms; these include branching, plate, and encrusting. Branching fire coral adopts a calcareous structure which branches off into rounded, finger-like tips. Plate-growing fire coral forms a shape similar to that of fellow
cnidarian lettuce corals - erect, thin sheets, which group together to form a colony. In encrusting fire coral, growth takes place on the surface structure of calcareous coral or gorgonian structures. The
gonophores in the family Milleporidae arise from the
coenosarc (the hollow living tubes of the upright branching individuals of a colony), within chambers embedded entirely in the
coenosteum (the calcareous mass forming the skeleton of a compound coral). Reproduction in fire corals is more complex than in other reef-building corals. It begins when the polyp of fire coral releases a medusa. This medusa then distributes its eggs in the water stream. Next, another male medusa fertilizes the eggs with its sperm, which produces a planula. After that, this planula floats in the water until it finds a reef it is able to attach to and grow back into a polyp, settling on a hard surface. Finally, the cycle repeats. == Biology and Behaviors ==