Sponges make up the phylum Porifera, the simplest
multicellular animals. There are thousands
of sponge species. Most inhabit oceans, although
freshwater species exist. Each saltwater
sponge has a stem that attaches it to a rock or other
object on the ocean floor. Sponge remains are
found in the oldest, fossil-bearing rocks.
Live sponges can be black, brown, gray, red,
purple, or green. They are abundant in earth's
oceans, from shallows to huge depths and from
the equator to the Arctic. However, sponges are
most numerous and varied in tropical to warm
temperate habitats. The four sponge groups are
the marine Calcarea, with calcium carbonate skeletons;
deep sea Hexactinellida (glass sponges),
with silica skeletons; marine and freshwater Demospongiae,
comprising 95 percent of species, with
skeletons made of flexible spongin (as in a bath
sponge) and/or silica; and Sclerospongiae, with
silica-, spongin- and calcium-containing skeletons.
The Physical Nature of Sponges
Live sponges have outer layers of cells, which provide
their color, and inner-layer flagellate cells
that move water. The simplest sponge is a tube
with many pores (ostia) on its surface. Water enters
the tube, via ostia, in a current due to flagella
attached to inner-layer cells. Flagellate cells absorb
oxygen and digest tiny sea creatures. Then
water is expelled through an opening, the osculum,
atop the tube. Ejection, due to pressure
from flagellar movement, moves depleted water
away from the sponge, preventing its reuse.
Sponges form groups if a sponge develops
young that remain connected to it. As more and
more young develop, their body cavities become
canal networks. Water then enters via ostia and
passes through canals to chambers where flagellate
cells absorb food and oxygen. Used water
leaves by larger and larger tubes, reentering
oceans via an osculum.
Between outer and flagellate cells a sponge has
a skeleton made of structures called spicules.
Whena sponge dies, its flesh decays and the skeleton
remains. There are three sponge skeleton
types. Calcarea sponge spicules are made of lime.
Hexactinellida (glass) sponges have glassy, silica
spicules. Some glassy spicules form attractive skeletons,
such as Venus' flower basket. In Demospongiae
(including freshwater sponges) the skeleton
is almost entirely spongin. Spongin skeletons
may contain minute spicules of lime, silica, or
both. Bath sponge skeletons have no spicules.
Many sponges begin life as fertilized eggs,
which divide until becoming free-swimming larvae.
Flagella transport larvae until they settle on
the ocean bottom and attach to rocks and other objects
in order to become adults. Sponge reproduction
can also be asexual, via buds or gemmules.
Sponges have a great ability to regenerate in order
to replace lost body parts or even most of the body.
Some sponges, treated so all their cells are separated
but left in water, form a new sponge.
Commercial Sponges
Some Demospongiae have soft, elastic, spongin
skeletons that absorb large amounts of water.
These qualities have long made them useful tools
for surgery, military gun-cleaning, and the cleaning of automobiles, houses, and bodies. The best
such sponges come from the eastern Mediterranean,
off the Syrian and Greek coasts. Sponges are
also fished for off Tampa Bay, Tarpon Springs, the
Florida Keys, and the Bahamas.
In deep waters, suited sponge divers descend
into the sea to dredge sponges. In shallow waters,
off Florida, glass-bottomed boats from a mother
ship are used. A pole ending in a pronged hook
loosens sponges sighted and brings them to the
surface. On return to the mother ship, sponges are
spread on deck until their flesh decays, hung to
dry in the rigging, or kept in seaside pens which
tides fill and empty, removing sponge tissues and
leaving skeletons.
Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Porifera
Class: Demospongiae
Family: Spongidae
Genus and species: Spongia adriatica
Geographical location: Tropical and subtropical
Adriatic Sea, the Mediterranean, the Gulf of
Mexico, and the Caribbean
Habitat: Oceans and seas
Gestational period: Sexually, eggs are fertilized
by sperm from a nearby sponge, and resultant
larvae become sponges; asexually, pieces of
sponge break off, settle down, and grow (regenerate),
or buds or gemmules form new
bath sponges
Life span: Indefinite and dependent on environment
Special anatomy: As sponges are the most basic
form of animal life, there is little anatomy at all
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