Porifera
Porifera
Porifera
1, Unit – 3
Porifera
The Sponges
Phylum Porifera (Latin porous, “pore”; ferre : “to bear”).
They evolved from colonial protozoans and thus they are more
complex than the protozoans. They are pore bearing animals.
About 6000 living species, most are marine although there are
about 200 freshwater species.
General characters
Surface bears numerous minute pores known as ostia. These are
openings of canal system (asconoid, siconoid, and leuconoid).
Water current in the body is maintained by the canal system
Habit and habitat: Aquatic, sedentary, mostly marine but fresh
water also.
Respiration by diffusion
Fertilization: Internal
Reproduction in sponges
Classification of Porifera
Class 1-Calcarea or Calcispongiae
Scypha
Clathrina Scyon
Class 2- Hexactinellida or Hyalospongiae
Skeleton: Spicules are made of silica Spicules are six pointed and
have a lattice-like structure
Also known as Glass sponges
Cup, vase or urn shape
Canal system : Syconoid or leuconoid
2. Food and oxygen are brought into body through this water
current.
3. Also the excreta are taken out of the body with the help of
this water current.
4. The reproductive bodies are carried out and into the body of
the sponges by the water current.
The canal system serves the purpose of nutrition. It is regarded as a
highway for the food through the body cells in the radial canal with flagella,
which capture the food particles. Water currents are produced by flagella.
Thus, waters flows into the central cavity or spongocoel. Smaller food-
particles e.g. diatoms, protozoa and particles of organic debris are ingested
into the cells protoplasm and digested. The digestion is intracellular. Robert
Grant first of all observed the flow of water in the body-wall by adding
powdered carmine to the water. Thus, canal system here does the same
functions as circulatory system in higher animals.
The spongocoel is the single largest spacious cavity in the body of the
sponge. The spongocoel is lined by the flattened collar cells or
choanocytes. Spongocoel opens outside through a narrow circular
opening called as osculum located at the distal end and it is fringed with
large monaxon spicules.
The surrounding sea water enters the canal system through the
ostia. The flow of the water is maintained by the beating of the
flagella of the collar cells. The rate of water flow is slow as the
large spongocoel contains much water which cannot be pumped
out through a single osculum.
Body walls of syconoid sponges include two types of canals, the radial
canals and the incurrent canals paralleling and alternating with each
other. Both these canals blindly end into the body wall but are
interconnected by minute pores.
Incurrent pores also known as dermal ostia are found on the outer
surface of the body. These incurrent pores open into incurrent canals.
The incurrent canals are non-flagellated as they are lined by pinacocytes
and not choanocytes. The incurrent canals leas into adjacent radial canals
through the minute openings called prosopyles.
On the other hand radial canals are flagellated as they are lined by
choanocytes. These canals open into the central spongocoel by internal
ostia or apopyles.
In this type the radial symmetry is lost due to the complexity of the canal
system and this results in an irregular symmetry.
The flagellated chambers are small compared to that of the asconoid and
syconoid type. These chambers are lined by choanocytes and are
spherical in shape. All other spaces are lined by pinacocytes.
The large and spacious like that of in the asconoid and syconoid type of
canal systems is absent here. Here the spongocoel is much reduced.
This excurrent canal finally communicates with the outside through the
osculum.
Eurypylous, Aphodal and Diplodal are different types of leuconoid canal
system
EX – Spongilla
The course of water current through the canal system can be represented as
follows:
Anatriaenes, orthotriaenes
and protriaenes are
triaenes-megascleres with
one long and three short
rays.
Microscleres are small spicules measuring from 10-60 μm and are
scattered throughout the tissue and are not part of the main support
element.
These are not consumed as food due to their bad taste, odour
and sharp spicules
Provides habitat for animals eg snails, shrimp, sea stars
Provides food for animals eg snails, small fish
Provides camouflage for marine animals eg crabs
Help to clean-up the ocean floor by boring into dead shells and
corals releasing chemicals to break them down
Used commercially for bathing / cleaning sponges ie dried up
spongin (support material) ‘skeletal framework’
Produce chemicals used in research for cancer, viruses, and
Antibodies