Classic Boston Cream Pie Recipe
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Classic Boston Cream Pie Recipe
A “ping pong” sponge (Chondrocladia sp.) is documented on a seafloor bank west of South Georgia Island
Say hello to the “ping-pong” sponge (Chondrocladia sp.). Known for its spherical, spiny appendages, this carnivorous sponge uses hook-like structures to trap prey.
ROV SuBastian/Schmidt Ocean Institute (CC BY-NC-SA)
Lyre Sponge or Harp Sponge (Chondrocladia lyra), family Cladorhizidae, order Poecilosclerida, class Demospongiae
Found at depths of 800–11,500 ft (3,300–3,500 m), off the coast of northern California, at the Escanaba Ridge and the Monterey Canyon.
Carnivorous.
photograph by Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
The harp sponge: an extraordinary new species of carnivorous sponge
Oct. 31st, 2012
In this video we describe a new species of carnivorous sponge, Chondrocladia lyra from the deep-sea off California. C. lyra is called the harp sponge because its basic structure, called a vane, is shaped like a harp or lyre. Each vane consists of a horizontal branch supporting several parallel, vertical branches. Clinging with root-like "rhizoids" to the soft, muddy sediment, the harp sponge captures tiny animals that are swept into its branches by deep-sea currents. Typically, sponges feed by straining bacteria and bits of organic material from the seawater they filter through their bodies. However, carnivorous harp sponges snare their prey—tiny crustaceans—with barbed hooks that cover the sponge's branching limbs. Once the harp sponge has its prey in its clutches, it envelops the animal in a thin membrane, and then slowly begins to digest it. The harp sponge's unusual shape and exposure to currents may also help it to reproduce more effectively. The swollen balls at the tip of the sponge's upright branches produce packets of sperm. These sperm packets are released into passing currents and are captured on the branches of other nearby sponges. The sperm then works its way from the packets into the host sponge to fertilize its eggs. As the fertilized eggs mature, these contact sites swell up, forming bulges part way up the host sponge's branches (see photo).
via: MBARI
Read the original paper here:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ivb.12001
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Day 10: Home
For @montereybayaquarium ‘s Deep Sea December
Fanart of @rogdona's sponge oc (right) Fansponge based on a scouring pad (left)
Deep-sea fauna collected on a plate entitled "Oceanography." Larousse pour tous. 1909. Adolphe Millot, illustrator.
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