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Published byPamela Fields Modified over 8 years ago
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Phylum Porifera Sponges
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Phylum Porifera (“pore bearer”)- sponges Characteristics: Sponges are sessile (don’t move) Sponges grow in many sizes, shapes and colors Sponges can be encrusting, boring, vaselike, treelike, and can be several meters in diameter
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Specific Types: Encrusting - flat, soft, found on rocky shores and tide pools Tubular - vase-shaped, hard, found in calm tropical waters & coral reefs pecten sponge - soft, has a mutually symbiotic relationship with a bivalve mollusk (scallop) -sponge grows on the scallop’s shell, completely covering the shell. sponge gets a place to live and more water to filter -the scallop gets protection- something may try to bite the scallop and will just scrape off sponge and the sponge will regenerate. boring sponge - bores holes into the shell of the gastropod (snail ) called an abalone and eats the abalone (parasitic)
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Sponge Anatomy Sponges have skeletons made of spongin (flexible), spicules (prickly), or both Sponges can be identified by the composition of the spicules (siliceous-Si spicules, calcareous-Ca spicules) Sponges have tiny pores on the outside called porocyte cells (water comes into the sponge here)
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Sponge Anatomy cont… Epithelial cells cover the outside of the sponge A large opening (pore) is the osculum, where the water exits the sponge Collar cells with flagella set up a current by beating whip tails, which bring water in the pore cells and out the osculum Amoebocyte cells transport and digest nutrients, while also making spicules (act as amoebas within sponge body)
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Sponge Digestion Sponges have NO digestive system, only digestive cells Sponges feed on detritus (bacteria, plankton, animal matter) by filter feeding Food is trapped by the collar cells, while the amoebaocytes distribute the nutrients Wastes are expelled through the osculum
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Sponge Reproduction Sponges can reproduce sexually and asexually Sexually- shed sperm & eggs into the water (hermaphroditic) Asexually- budding & gemmules Sponges also have amazing powers of regeneration
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Sponge Symbiotic Relationships Sponges often form symbiotic relationships (live in close association with another species) Mutualism- Commensalism- :I Parasitism-
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