Other videos on coraltimelapse
From BBC
Australia's Great Barrier Reef - the world's largest living organism - has been entrancing divers with its vivid colours and curious lifeforms for centuries.
But for one man, the glimpses he caught under water were not enough - he wanted to see more of the life hidden from most people.
Using time-lapse photography, Dr Pim Bongaerts of University of Queensland's Global Change Institute has spent the past five years documenting the movement, communication and even violent interactions that living corals engage in.
It is all behaviour that is part of the life cycle of a coral reef, but happens too slowly for us to see.
Dr Bongaerts shared some of his remarkable time-lapse footage exclusively with the BBC, and revealed some of the underwater mysteries that it has brought to life.
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