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  2. Spongivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spongivore

    A spongivore is an animal anatomically and physiologically adapted to eating animals of the phylum Porifera, commonly called sea sponges, for the main component of its diet. As a result of their diet, spongivore animals like the hawksbill turtle have developed sharp, narrow bird-like beak that allows them to reach within crevices on the reef to ...

  3. Sponge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sponge

    Sponges constitute the phylum Porifera, and have been defined as sessile metazoans (multicelled immobile animals) that have water intake and outlet openings connected by chambers lined with choanocytes, cells with whip-like flagella. [13]: 29 However, a few carnivorous sponges have lost these water flow systems and the choanocytes.

  4. Spongilla lacustris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spongilla_lacustris

    The cells in the sponge walls filter food from the water. Whatever is not uptaken by the sponge is pumped through the body out of a large opening. The class demosponges are the most abundant and diverse of the sponge classes. Some of the sponges in this class have skeletons made from silicon-containing spicules, spongin fibers, or both ...

  5. Microplastics are choking our waters. Could a sponge made of ...

    www.aol.com/microplastics-choking-waters-could...

    They then tested the sponge in four different water samples, taken from irrigation water, pond water, lake water and sea water, and found it removed up to 99.9% of microplastics, according to a ...

  6. A thriving colony of 300-year-old Arctic sea sponges survives ...

    www.aol.com/news/thriving-colony-300-old-arctic...

    The latest find is fossil-feeding sea sponges. Scientists are discovering alien-like worlds in the uncharted oceans of the Arctic and Antarctica. The latest find is fossil-feeding sea sponges ...

  7. Hexactinellid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexactinellid

    Bolosoma stalked glass sponge. Hexactinellid sponges are sponges with a skeleton made of four- and/or six-pointed siliceous spicules, often referred to as glass sponges.They are usually classified along with other sponges in the phylum Porifera, but some researchers consider them sufficiently distinct to deserve their own phylum, Symplasma.

  8. Choanocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choanocyte

    The cell has the closest resemblance to the choanoflagellates which are the closest related single celled protists to the animal kingdom (metazoans). The flagellae beat regularly, creating a water flow across the microvilli which can then filter nutrients from the water taken from the collar of the sponge.

  9. Xestospongia testudinaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xestospongia_testudinaria

    More commonly known as Giant Barrel Sponges, they have the basic structure of a typical sponge. Their body is made of a reticulation of cells aggregate on a siliceous scaffold composed of small spikes called spicules. Water is taken into the inner chamber of the sponge (known as the spongocoel) through ostia (small pores created by porocytes).