bioerosion
Bioerosion is the removal of hard biological substrates by living organisms. In marine environments, it involves macroborers that drill into substrates such as coral skeletons, limestone, and shells, including sponges (notably Cliona), shipworms (bivalves in the family Teredinidae), and polychaete worms, as well as microborers such as endolithic algae, cyanobacteria, and fungi that penetrate surfaces on a microscopic scale. These organisms remove material through mechanical boring and by chemical dissolution, generating tunnels, holes, or cavities and weakening the substrate.
Bioerosion influences reef framework, sediment production, and habitat structure; it reduces reef accretion, increases porosity, and
In research and teaching, bioerosion is studied in both modern and fossil contexts to understand carbonate