Marine demosponge rheology / dissection microscopy
Authors/Creators
- 1. University of Pennsylvania
- 2. Yale University
Description
Sponges are animals that inhabit many aquatic environments while filtering small particles and ejecting metabolic wastes. They are composed of cells in a bulk extracellular matrix, often with an embedded scaffolding of stiff, siliceous spicules. We hypothesize that the mechanical response of this heterogeneous tissue to hydrodynamic flow influences cell proliferation in a manner that generates the body of a sponge. Toward a more complete picture of the emergence of sponge morphology, we dissected a set of species and subjected disks of living tissue to physiological shear and uniaxial deformations on a rheometer. Various species exhibited rheological properties such as anisotropic elasticity, shear softening and compression stiffening, negative normal stress, and non-monotonic dissipation as a function of both shear strain and frequency. Erect sponges possessed aligned, spicule-reinforced fibers which endowed three times greater stiffness axially compared with orthogonally. By contrast, tissue taken from shorter sponges was more isotropic but time-dependent, suggesting higher flow sensitivity in these compared with erect forms. We explore ecological and physiological implications of our results and speculate about flow-induced mechanical signaling in sponge cells.
Notes
Files
Encrusting_1_Gp_v_axial_strain_-_strong_compression_stiffening.png
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Additional details
Related works
- Is derived from
- 10.5281/zenodo.5489941 (DOI)
- 10.5061/dryad.wpzgmsbqn (DOI)