“…Corals are thought to accrete CaCO3 directly from a discrete calcifying fluid (e.g., Cohen and McConnaughey, 2003 and references therein;Al-Horani et al, 2003;Cohen and Holcomb, 2009;Gaetani and Cohen, 2006;Ries, 2011a), with mineralization sites and crystal orientations being influenced by organic templates and/or calicoblastic cells (e.g., Cuif and Dauphin, 2005;Goldberg, 2001;Meibom et al, 2008;Tambutté et al, 100 2007). Mollusks are also thought to precipitate their shells from a discrete calcifying fluid between the external epithelium of the mantle and the inner layer of the shell known as the extrapallial fluid (e.g., Crenshaw, 1972), with hemocytes and organic templates playing a potentially important role in crystal nucleation (e.g., Mairie et al, 2012;Mount et al, 2004;Weiner et al, 1984). Coralline red algae, such as those belonging to the family Corallinaceae, are also thought to precipitate high-Mg calcite (and/or aragonite) crystals from an intercellular calcifying fluid (Simkiss and Wilbur, 1989).…”