Since its discovery(1,2), the deep-sea glass sponge Euplectella aspergillum has attracted interest in its mechanical properties and beauty. Its skeletal system is composed of amorphous hydrated silica and is arranged in a highly regular and hierarchical cylindrical lattice that begets exceptional flexibility and resilience to damage(3-6). Structural analyses dominate the literature, but hydrodynamic fields that surround and penetrate the sponge have remained largely unexplored. Here we address an unanswered question: whether, besides improving its mechanical properties, the skeletal motifs of E. aspergillum underlie the optimization of the flow physics within and beyond its body cavity. We use extreme flow simulations based on the 'lattice ...
A few studies have shown that sponges are capable of locomotion on the substrata. However, the ecolo...
It has been suggested that immobile benthic animals with no attachment and cementation have adapted ...
In their Comment [1], Leys et al. question the modelling choice of our original study [2] to focus o...
Since its discovery(1,2), the deep-sea glass sponge Euplectella aspergillum has attracted interest i...
Sponges are animals that inhabit many aquatic environments while filtering small particles and eject...
Sponges are animals that inhabit many aquatic environments while filtering small particles and eject...
Successful dispersal of freshwater sponges depends on the formation of dormant sponge bodies (gemmul...
Successful dispersal of freshwater sponges depends on the formation of dormantsponge bodies (gemmule...
Sessile filter feeding animals, including sponges (Porifera), rely on efficient fluid transport syst...
Sponges are suspension feeders that use flagellated collar-cells (choanocytes) to actively filter a ...
Sponges possess a highly efficient fluid transport system. As inother biological fluid transport sys...
Sponge-grade Archaeocyatha were early Cambrian biomineralizing metazoans that constructed reefs glob...
Immobile benthic organisms lacking attachment or cementation mechanisms are considered to be best ad...
The globular sponge Tethya wilhelma SAR?, SAR?, NICKEL & BRUMMER 2001 (Porifera, Demospongiae, Hadro...
Sponges as sessile filter feeders relay on an efficient canal system for optimal water exchangeand f...
A few studies have shown that sponges are capable of locomotion on the substrata. However, the ecolo...
It has been suggested that immobile benthic animals with no attachment and cementation have adapted ...
In their Comment [1], Leys et al. question the modelling choice of our original study [2] to focus o...
Since its discovery(1,2), the deep-sea glass sponge Euplectella aspergillum has attracted interest i...
Sponges are animals that inhabit many aquatic environments while filtering small particles and eject...
Sponges are animals that inhabit many aquatic environments while filtering small particles and eject...
Successful dispersal of freshwater sponges depends on the formation of dormant sponge bodies (gemmul...
Successful dispersal of freshwater sponges depends on the formation of dormantsponge bodies (gemmule...
Sessile filter feeding animals, including sponges (Porifera), rely on efficient fluid transport syst...
Sponges are suspension feeders that use flagellated collar-cells (choanocytes) to actively filter a ...
Sponges possess a highly efficient fluid transport system. As inother biological fluid transport sys...
Sponge-grade Archaeocyatha were early Cambrian biomineralizing metazoans that constructed reefs glob...
Immobile benthic organisms lacking attachment or cementation mechanisms are considered to be best ad...
The globular sponge Tethya wilhelma SAR?, SAR?, NICKEL & BRUMMER 2001 (Porifera, Demospongiae, Hadro...
Sponges as sessile filter feeders relay on an efficient canal system for optimal water exchangeand f...
A few studies have shown that sponges are capable of locomotion on the substrata. However, the ecolo...
It has been suggested that immobile benthic animals with no attachment and cementation have adapted ...
In their Comment [1], Leys et al. question the modelling choice of our original study [2] to focus o...