Paper detail

CoralLite: μCT Reconstruction of Coral Colonies from Individual Corallites

The life history of an individual coral is archived within the accreting skeleton of the colony. While reef-forming coral colonies (e.g. massive $\textit{Porites}$ sp.) may live for hundreds of years and deposit calcareous structures many metres in height and width, their living tissue is a thin outer surface layer comprised of asexually-dividing polyps that only survive a few years. To understand the rate and timing of polyp division and the consequences for colony skeletal growth, scientists need to track the skeletal corallite deposited around each polyp. Here we propose CoralLite, an annotated $μ$CT scan dataset of entire calcareous skeletons and an associated, first corallite deep learning reconstruction baseline. CoralLite combines fully quantified volumetric segmentations with cross-slice linking for visualisations of 3D models for each corallite up to colony scale. For segmentation, we propose and evaluate in detail a hybrid V-Trans-UNet architecture applicable to segmenting tiled $μ$CT virtual slabs of $\textit{Porites}$ sp. colonies. The model is pre-trained on weakly annotated data and topology-aware fine-tuned using fully annotated slice sections with 8k+ manual corallite region annotations. On unseen slices of the same colony, the resulting model reaches 0.94 topological accuracy at mean Dice scores of 0.77 on the same colony and projection axis, and 0.63 mean Dice scores on a different, biologically unrelated specimen. Whilst our experiments are limited in scale and context, our results show for the first time that visual machine learning can effectively support full 3D individual corallite modelling from $μ$CT scans of coral skeletons alone. For reproducibility and as a baseline for future research we publish our full dataset of 697 $μ$CT slices, 37 partial or full slice annotations, and all network weights and source code with this paper.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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