COMMERVIAL SPONGES. 4!) 



The Cliona bores into shells, causing them to disinte- 

 grate. For example, Cliona sulphurea of Verrill has been, 

 found by him boring into various shells, such as the oyster, 

 mussel, and scallop ; it also spreads out-, on all sides, envelop- 

 ing and dissolving the entire shell. It has eren been found 

 to penetrate one or two inches into hard statuary marble. 



Of the marketable sponges there are six species, with nu- 

 merous varieties. They are available for our use from being 

 simply fibrous, having no silicious spicules. The Mediter- 

 ranean sponges are the best, being the softest; tliose of the 

 Red Sea are next in quality, while our West Indian speciei? 

 are coarser and less durable. Our glove-sponge (Spoiigia- 

 tuiuUfera Uuch. and Mich.) corresponds to Spongia Adriat- 

 ica Schmidt, which is the Turkey cup-sponge and Levant 

 toilet sponge of the Mediterranean. Spongia gossypina 

 Duch. and Mich, the wool sponge of Florida and the Baha- 

 mas, corresponds to S. equina Schmidt, the horse or bath, 

 sponge of the ilediterranean. 



BRANCH II.— PORIFERA. 



The sponges are many-celled animcds, with three cell-layers, without a^ 

 true digestive cavity, supported usually by calcareous or silieioics spicules, 

 the body-mass permeated by ciliated passages, or containing minute chain 

 bers lined hy ciliated, collared, tnonad-lilce cells. No true m/)uth-opemnq , 

 but usually an irregular system of inhalent pores opening into the cell-lined 

 chambers or pansages through which the food is introduced in currents of 

 sea-water, tlie waste particles passing out of the body by a single, but inort 

 usually, many cloacal openings {oscula). Sponges are hermaphroditic, mul- 

 tiplying by fertilized eggs, the germ passing through a morula and a gastrula 

 stage. (The characters of the Class the same as those of the Branch.) 



Order I. Calcispongia. Animal supported by a framework of calcare- 

 ous spicules, disposed in lines or columns at right angles to 

 the walls ; with cell-lined radiating canals. (Sycon.) 



Order 3. Carneospongim. ]\Iesoderm exceedingly thick ; the ciliated 

 cells restricted to cell-lined chambers. Either no solid 

 framework, as in Halisarca, or usually a well-developed 

 fibrous or silicious framework. (Spongilla, Spongia, Hya- 

 lonema, Euplect'Oli t 



