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  • So, sponges are pretty chill, right?

  • They're just gentle filter-feeders that bask in the sunlight and absorb nutrients from the water around them.

  • Except, that's not true of all sponges.

  • And here's something you might not have expected: Some of them are carnivores!

  • Normally, a sponge absorbs nutrients with the help of its aquiferous system:

  • an internal series of canals, chambers, and spaces that filter water and nutrients.

  • But sponges of the family Cladorhizidae have either reduced or entirely absent aquiferous systems.

  • To get their energy, they've evolved a very different strategy: They catch and eat small animals.

  • To do this, they've developed some pretty amazing adaptations.

  • For one, they've taken on strange, plant-like shapes.

  • They often have stalks or branches reaching up off the seafloor, and from their bodies,

  • long, thin filaments stretch out around them like fishing lines.

  • Each of these filaments is then lined with tiny spines called spicules.

  • And that's where stuff starts to get really cool.

  • These spicules act like hook-and-loop fasteners to catch the little legs and hairs of tiny crustaceans or other animals

  • and they seem pretty effective.

  • The prey captured by some of these sponges can be as long as eight millimeters.

  • Which isn't bad for a sponge's dinner, especially since many sponges aren't huge themselves!

  • Of course, catching the food is just the beginning.

  • You still have to eat it somehow.

  • And when these sponges are ready for their meal, they make use of another amazing ability: migrating cells.

  • Like all organisms, sponges' bodies are made of cells.

  • But sponges can do something pretty cool: Their cells can make trips across their bodies.

  • Some sponges may use this ability to help repair damaged body parts, and others use cell motion to slowly crawl across the seafloor.

  • But carnivorous sponges use their migrating cells as mobile stomachs.

  • Once prey is captured in their filaments, stem cells near the base of the sponge begin to multiply.

  • Then, they turn into digestive cells and swarm upward.

  • Slowly but surely, they surround the prey and begin digesting it and absorbing its nutrients.

  • Some of these cells even produce their own digestive enzymes, while others harbor enzyme-producing bacteria.

  • So basically, these animals make a stomach, and then that stomach travels upwards to claim its meal!

  • For a large morsel, digestion can take eight to ten days.

  • But afterward, the sponge is ready to feed again.

  • You might expect such an odd lifestyle to be extremely rare, but scientists have identified

  • more than one hundred seventy-five species of carnivorous sponges!

  • They think this might have happened because these animals live in nutrient-poor waters

  • like inside sea caves, or hundreds or thousands of meters below the surface.

  • Which makes them crummy places for filter-feeders, so any sponges that live there have had to adapt and find new ways to get their food.

  • And apparently, along the way, they developed a taste for tiny critters.

  • It just goes to show that even the calmest-looking things in nature can secretly be really hardcore.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow, which is brought to you by our patrons on Patreon!

  • Thank you to everyone who supports the show, whether you've been doing it for a day or half a decade.

  • We couldn't cover so many of these cool topics without you.

  • And if you want to learn about becoming a patron, you can head over to patreon.com/SciShow.

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肉食性海綿 - 原來如此 (Carnivorous Sponges — So That's a Thing)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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