Carnivorous Coral
Chondrocladia
lyra, also known as the lyre sponge or harp sponge, is a species of carnivorous deep-sea sponge first discovered off the Californian
coast living at depths of 10,800–11,500 feet (3,300–3,500 m) by Welton L.
Lee, Henry M Reiswig, William C. Austin, and Lonny Lundsten from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute (MBARI).
The species was listed among
the Top 10 New Species 2013 discovered in 2012 as selected by the International Institute for Species
Exploration at Arizona State University out of more than 140 nominated
species. The selection was publicised on 22 May 2013.
Most corals obtain nutrients
from photosynthetic algae that live within the coral’s tissue. That also means
that they have to live within 200ft/60m of the surface. Well, not this species,
also known as the harp sponge.
It was discovered in 2000 off the coast of California,
but only confirmed to be carnivorous this year. Shaped somewhat like a
candelabra to increase its surface area, it traps tiny crustaceans with tiny
Velcro-like hooks and then spreads a membrane over it, slowly digesting it with
chemicals. As if that wasn’t weird enough, it reproduces using “sperm packets”
– see those balls at the top of each branch? Yes, those are packets of
spermatophores, and every now and then they float away to find another sponge
and reproduce.
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