||Spon"gi*æ (?), n. pl. [See
Sponge.] (Zoöl.) The grand division of the
animal kingdom which includes the sponges; -- called also
Spongida, Spongiaria, Spongiozoa, and
Porifera.
&fist; In the Spongiæ, the soft sarcode of the body is
usually supported by a skeleton consisting of horny fibers, or of
silleceous or calcareous spicules. The common sponges contain larger
and smaller cavities and canals, and numerous small ampullæ
which which are lined with ciliated cells capable of taking in solid
food. The outer surface usually has minute pores through which water
enters, and large openings for its exit. Sponges produce eggs and
spermatozoa, and the egg when fertilized undergoes segmentation to
form a ciliated embryo.
||Spon"gi*æ (?), n. pl. [See
Sponge.] (Zoöl.) The grand division of the
animal kingdom which includes the sponges; -- called also
Spongida, Spongiaria, Spongiozoa, and
Porifera.
&fist; In the Spongiæ, the soft sarcode of the body is
usually supported by a skeleton consisting of horny fibers, or of
silleceous or calcareous spicules. The common sponges contain larger
and smaller cavities and canals, and numerous small ampullæ
which which are lined with ciliated cells capable of taking in solid
food. The outer surface usually has minute pores through which water
enters, and large openings for its exit. Sponges produce eggs and
spermatozoa, and the egg when fertilized undergoes segmentation to
form a ciliated embryo.