Sea sponges launch slow-motion snot rockets to clean their pores
Time-lapse video reveals the surprising way debris-filled mucus moves out of a sponge’s body

Sea sponges don’t look like the most active of creatures. But a new study shows how some sponges, like this pink Caribbean tube sponge (Aplysina archeri), are constantly “sneezing” out a mucusy goo.
johnandersonphoto/iStock/Getty Images PlusThe next time you spot a sea sponge, say “gesundheit!” Some sponges regularly “sneeze” to clear debris from their porous bodies.
As filter feeders, sponges draw in water through inlet pores — called ostia — and strain it through an internal canal system for nutrients. But there are also inedible bits in the water, like sediment. To prevent the undesirable junk from clogging up their outer pores, a Caribbean tube sponge (Aplysina archeri), Niklas Kornder, a marine biologist at the University of Amsterdam, and colleagues report online August 10 in Current Biology. To the team’s surprise, it found that the sponge expels its snot from the same pores through which it absorbs water.
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Headlines and summaries of the latest Science News articles, delivered to your email inbox every Thursday.But when the team captured time-lapse video of A. archeri, it saw tiny specks of mucus exiting from the ostia, moving against the flow of incoming water. Sneezelike contractions appeared to expel and move the specks along a “mucus highway” across the surface of the sponge to points where they collected in stringy, gooey clumps. Unlike an explosive human sneeze, the sponges slowly and continuously secreted debris-laden mucus from their ostia, with one contraction taking between 20 and 50 minutes, the study finds.
Most sponges appear to sneeze, so it’s likely not just A. archeri that uses the counterflow technique, Leys says. The team also noted a similar behavior in an Indo-Pacific sponge (Chelonaplysilla sp). But biologists need to dig deeper to figure out how widespread the mechanism is. It’s also unclear exactly what the mucus is or how it’s moving backward through pores.