Porifera

Home | About MESA | Contact MESA | Seaweek | Site Resources | Marine Links | International News | MESA History
Porifera

Porifera

Structure of Sponges

The body of a sponge consists of jelly-like material (mesohyl) made mainly of collagen and reinforced by a dense network of fibres also made of collagen.sandwiched between two thin layers of cells. Many also have a skeleton made up of spicules of calcium carbonate or silica. Spicules vary in shape from simple rods to three-dimensional "stars" with up to six rays. Some sponges also secrete exoskeletons that lie completely outside their organic components whilst others, e.g. Spongia officinalis, the bath sponge, have no spicules at all.

Sponges do not have a nervous, digestive or circulatory system. They rely on keeping up a constant water flow through their bodies to obtain food and oxygen and to remove wastes.

Sponges have a unique feeding system among animals. Instead of a mouths they have tiny pores (ostia) in their outer walls through which water is drawn. Cells in the sponge walls filter food from the water as the water is pumped through the body and the osculum ("little mouth"). The flow of water through the sponge is in one direction only, driven by the beating of flagella which line the surface of chambers connected by a series of canals. Sponge cells perform a wide range of bodily functions and appear to be more independent of each other than are the cells of other animals.

Structure of a sponge Image from Life on Australian Seashores
Sponges can regenerating from fragments that are broken off by currents or predators, although this only works if the fragments include the right types of cells. A few species reproduce by budding and others by producing gemmules. Gemmules are "survival pods" which a few marine sponges and many freshwater species produce in large numbers when dying. Gemmules, cyst-like spheres, are made by wrapping shells of spongin, often reinforced with spicules, around clusters of special amoeba-like cells called archeocytes that are full of nutrients.

Sponges are usually hermaphrodites, however they are either male, female or neuter at any time. Most sponges reproduce sexually by releasing sperm cells into the water. In viviparous species the cells that capture most of the adults' food capture the sperm cells and transport them to ova in the parent's mesohyl. The fertilized eggs begin development within the parent and the larvae are released to swim off in search of places to settle. In oviparous species both sperm and egg cells are released into the water and fertilisation and development take place outside the parent's bodies.

How a sponge feeds Image from Life on Australian Seashores

Viviparous - a method of reproduction in which the embryo develops inside the body of the female from which it gains nourishment. Oviparous - a method of reproduction in which eggs are laid, with little or no other embryonic development within the mother.

Giant Basket sponge (Demosponge) Image ©Image © Paul Flandinette Lattice sponge (Calcareous Sponge) Image © Ben Speers-Roesch Flickr Leucilla nutting (Calcareous Sponge) Image © Institut für Kommunikationswissenschaft
Yellow fan sponge (Demosponge) Image © Stefan Ottomanski Flickr Venus Flower Basket (Glass sponge) Image © Winterwaves Flickr Glass sponge Image © Marc AuMarc Flickr

Next: Porifera Image Gallery ...

Introduction
Structure of sponges
Image Gallery
Search site
Contact Web Manager © MESA 1999 - 2015 0.00000 secs
SpiderByte Web Design Top

Tag » What Does A Sponge Eat