The simplest of all animals, most sponges live in colonies     (groups) that are little more than units of cells organized into two  layers.     Most live in the sea and are usually hermaphroditic – each sponge     produces both eggs and sperm. The larvae are free-living, but adults  are     sessile – they remain anchored in one place.
Sponges have a skeleton of spicules  (pointed structures) but no     distinct body parts. Many are essentially a tube, closed at one end.  They are     not symmetrical. There are about 10,000 species.
(calcareous     sponges)
Features: often less than 10 cm (4 in)     high, skeletal spicules of calcium carbonate
(glass     sponges)
Features: skeletal, six-pointed, silica     (glass-like) spicules
(demosponges)
Features: some have three- or     four-pointed silica spicules
Sponges are classified by their  spicules, the pointed structures     that make up a sponge’s framework. In a calcareous sponge these are  made     of calcium. There are about 150 species of calcareous sponge.
Tube sponges, or demosponges, are  supported by a framework of     spongin, a material similar to keratin, the substance in our  fingernails. They     filter food from water drawn in through pores in the colony wall.  The water     exits through an opening called an osculum. Special cells called  collar cells     help to keep the water flowing.
 
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