Where Do Sponges Live?
Sponges live in all the world's oceans! From tropical reefs to polar seas, from shallow tide pools to deep trenches miles down, sponges thrive everywhere!
Most sponges are marine! Over 98% of sponge species live in salt water. They attach to hard surfaces - rocks, coral, shipwrecks, shells, or even other sponges! Once attached, sponges never move (adults are sessile). They spend their entire lives in one spot!
Tropical coral reefs are sponge paradises! Bright colors and diverse shapes make sponges prominent reef features. Tube sponges grow in forests! Barrel sponges reach enormous sizes. Encrusting sponges coat rocks in living carpets! Caribbean and Indo-Pacific reefs host thousands of sponge species!
Deep-sea sponges survive extreme conditions! Glass sponges live in deep, cold waters. Some form dense sponge gardens on seamounts and underwater ridges! Deep-sea sponges grow extremely slowly - some are thousands of years old! Antarctica's seafloor has spectacular giant sponges in near-freezing water!
Some sponges live in freshwater! About 200 species inhabit lakes, rivers, and streams. Freshwater sponges are usually small, green or brown, and encrusting. The green color comes from algae living inside them! Freshwater sponges form on submerged logs, rocks, and dock pilings.
Sponges need water flow! Constantly moving water brings food particles and oxygen while removing waste. Sponges orient themselves to catch optimal currents! Areas with strong water flow have dense sponge populations. Stagnant water can't support sponges!
Antarctic giant sponges are ancient! Some Antarctic sponges live over 1,500 years! The cold water and slow growth create incredibly old animals. A few may be 2,000+ years old - some were alive during Biblical times!
Boring sponges drill into shells and rocks! These sponges secrete acid that dissolves calcium carbonate! They bore networks of tunnels, living inside. Boring sponges weaken shells and contribute to reef erosion. They're important in nutrient recycling!
What Do Sponges Eat?
Sponges are filter feeders! They strain tiny food particles from water flowing through their bodies.
Sponges eat:
- Bacteria (main food source!)
- Phytoplankton (microscopic algae)
- Zooplankton (tiny animals)
- Organic particles floating in water
- Dissolved organic matter
- Some sponges host bacteria or algae that produce food
How sponges filter feed:
- Water enters through thousands of tiny pores (ostia)
- Inside, special cells called choanocytes (collar cells) have whip-like flagella
- Flagella beat continuously, creating water currents
- Choanocytes trap food particles in collar-like structures
- Food is digested by cells lining internal cavities
- Filtered water exits through large openings (oscula)
- Waste products are carried out with water
Sponges filter enormous amounts! One typical sponge pumps 20,000 times its own volume daily! A basketball-sized sponge filters 600 gallons of water per day! This makes sponges crucial water purifiers in ocean ecosystems!
Choanocytes are amazing! These specialized cells have sticky collars that trap particles as small as bacteria! Flagella beat 40 times per second, creating strong currents! The combined power of millions of choanocytes pulls water through the entire sponge!
Symbiotic partnerships help sponges! Many sponges host bacteria or algae (zooxanthellae) in their tissues. These partners photosynthesize or process chemicals, providing food to sponges! In return, sponges offer protection and nutrients. Partnerships help sponges survive in low-food environments!
Chemical defenses protect sponges! Since sponges can't move or run, they produce toxic chemicals that taste bad! These chemical defenses deter most predators. However, some animals eat sponges anyway - sea turtles, some fish, and nudibranchs (sea slugs) specialize in eating sponges!