Time-lapse cinemicrography was used to record the active movements of cells in living intact sponges. Each of the three main cell types (pinacocytes, mesohyl cells, and choanocytes) continuously moved and rearranged themselves so that the internal anatomy of the sponge was continuously remodeled. The shape and appearance of the sponges anatomical structures often changed substantially within a few hours. The most motile were the mesohyl cells, with many moving as fast as one cell-length per minute (15 microns/min). Mesohyl cell locomotion was often accompanied by displacements of spicules, canals, and choanocyte chambers; the patterns of these displacements suggested that the mesohyl cells were providing the motive forces for these rearrangements. The locomotion of the pinacocytes varied according to position: those along the outer sponge margins were most active, whereas those in other parts of the surface moved relatively little. Choanocytes were never observed to undergo independent locomotion but were always found grouped together in choanocyte chambers. These choanocyte chambers interacted with pinacocytes and mesohyl cells to form excurrent canals, which continuously moved, fused with, and branched from one another. These observations suggest that the experimental phenomenon of sponge cell-reaggregation and reconstitution, discovered by H. V. Wilson, represents an extreme version of morphogenetic processes that normally go on continuously within intact sponges. The results from the present study also suggest that these cellular rearrangements are controlled by active cell movements and behavioral responses that include but are not limited to selective cell adhesion.
Active locomotion by individual marine and freshwater sponges across glass, plastic and rubber substrata has been studied in relation to the behavior of the sponges' component cells. Sequential tracing of sponge outlines on aquarium walls shows that sponges can crawl up to 160 microns/hr (4 mm/day). Time-lapse cinemicrography and scanning electron microscopy reveal that moving sponges possess distinctive leading edges composed of motile cells. Sponge locomotion was found to be mechanically similar to the spreading of cell sheets in tissue culture both with respect to exertion of traction (which causes the wrinkling of rubber substrata) and with respect to the patterns of adhesive contacts formed with the substratum (as observed by interference reflection microscopy). Other similarities include the orientation of sponge locomotion along grooves and the preferential extension onto more adhesive substrata. Neither the patterns of wrinkling produced in rubber substrata nor the distributions of adhesive contacts seen by interference reflection microscopy show evidence of periodic, propagating waves of surface contractions, such as would be expected if the sponges' mechanism of locomotion were by peristalsis or locomotory waves. Our observations suggest that the displacement of sponges is achieved by the cumulative crawling locomotion of the cells that compose the sponge's lower surface. This mode of organismal locomotion suggests new explanations for the plasticity of sponge morphology, seems not to have been reported from other metazoans, and has significant ecological implications.
Various large‐scale behaviors (e.g., locomotion, shape changes, contractions) have been documented numerous times in intact sponges of the class Demospongiae. However, little is known about such motile events in calcareous sponges (Class Calcarea). Here, we report on whole‐sponge behaviors of the calcareous asconoid sponge Leucosolenia botryoides, as revealed by time‐lapse videos. These behaviors included locomotion and contraction. Locomotion in these sponges appeared as an outward movement (25–130 μm h−1) of the asconoid tubes away from the sponge's center; such translocations were always accompanied by extensive movements of protruding spicules, which appear to act as anchoring hooks for the sponge's translocations. This is the first report of whole‐sponge locomotion in the Calcarea. Contractile waves also were propagated in these sponges at speeds of 50–150 μm h−1, and they involved systemic contraction, then re‐extension of the asconoid tubes. The observations suggest that, like the more complex demosponges, these simple calcareous sponges are capable of adaptive whole‐animal behaviors (changes in flow, shape, and location), which occur in response to environmental stimuli such as crawling intruders.
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