Facts About Sponges (Porifera)

About Glass Sponges, Demosponges, and Calcarious Sponges

A giant barrel sponge in a coral reef

Sirachai Arunrugstichai / Getty Images

Sponges (Porifera) are a group of animals that includes about 10,000 living species. Members of this group include glass sponges, demosponges, and calcareous sponges. Adult sponges are sessile animals that live attached to hard rocky surfaces, shells, or submerged objects. The larvae are ciliated, free-swimming creatures. Most sponges inhabit marine environments but a few species live in freshwater habitats. Sponges are primitive multicellular animals that have no digestive system, no circulatory system, and no nervous system. They do not have organs and their cells are not organized into well-defined tissues.

About Sponge Types

There are three subgroups of sponges. The glass sponges have a skeleton that consists of fragile, glass-like spicules that are made of silica. The demosponges are often vibrantly colored and can grow to be the largest of all sponges. The demosponges account for more than 90 percent of all living sponge species. The calcarious sponges are the only group of sponges to have spicules that are made of calcium carbonate. Calcarious sponges are often smaller than other sponges.

Sponge Body Layers

The body of a sponge is like a sac that is perforated with lots of small openings or pores. The body wall consists of three layers:

  • An outer layer of flat epidermal cells
  • A middle layer that consists of gelatinous substance and amoeboid cells that migrate within the layer
  • An inner layer that consists of flagellated cells and collar cells (also called choanocytes)

How Sponges Eat

Sponges are filter feeders. They draw water in through the pores located throughout their body wall into a central cavity. The central cavity is lined with collar cells which have a ring of tentacles that surround a flagellum. Movement of the flagellum creates current that keeps water flowing through the central cavity and out of a hole at the top of the sponge called the osculum. As water passes over the collar cells, food is captured by the collar cell's ring of tentacles. Once absorbed, food is digested in food vacuoles or transferred to the amoeboid cells in the middle layer of the body wall for digestion.

The water current also delivers a constant supply of oxygen to the sponge and removes nitrogenous waste products. Water exits the sponge through the large opening at the top of the body called the osculum.

Classification of Porifera

Sponges are classified within the following taxonomic hierarchy:

Animals > Invertebrates > Porifera

Sponges are divided into the following taxonomic groups:

  • Calcarious sponges (Calcarea): There are about 400 species of calcarious sponges alive today. The calcareous sponges have spicules that consist of calcium carbonate, calcite, and aragonite. The spicules have two, three, or four points, depending on species.
  • Demosponges (Demospongiae): There are about 6,900 species of demo sponges alive today. The demo sponges are the most diverse of the three groups of sponges. Members of this group are ancient creatures that first arose during the Precambrian.
  • Glass sponges (Hexactinellida): There are about 3,000 species of glass sponges alive today. Glass sponges have a skeleton that is constructed from siliceous spicules.
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Klappenbach, Laura. "Facts About Sponges (Porifera)." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/sponges-profile-p2-130755. Klappenbach, Laura. (2023, April 5). Facts About Sponges (Porifera). Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/sponges-profile-p2-130755 Klappenbach, Laura. "Facts About Sponges (Porifera)." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/sponges-profile-p2-130755 (accessed March 29, 2024).