Clathrina cribrata

Clathrina cribrata is a species of calcareous sponge in the family Clathrinidae. The holotype was collected from Kristiansund, Norway.[2]

Clathrina cribrata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Porifera
Class: Calcarea
Order: Clathrinida
Family: Clathrinidae
Genus: Clathrina
Species:
C. cribrata
Binomial name
Clathrina cribrata
Rapp, Klautau & Valentine, 2001[1]

Description

Clathrina cribrata is a massive species with its body formed from a network of large, irregular tubes. Some of these extend above the main body of the sponge as blind tubes and others are open-ended, serving as osculi. This sponge contains only one type of calcareous spicule. These are three-rayed spicules, known as triactines, and are distributed throughout the tissues in an unorganized way.[2]

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gollark: Oh, no, I was incorrect, hmm.
gollark: It seems like all which can be done to the http://pn webserver is a few denial of service attacks.
gollark: Yet.
gollark: Doesn't exist, I haven't hacked the top level nameservers.

References

  1. van Soest, Rob (2013). "Clathrina cribrata Rapp, Klautau & Valentine, 2001". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  2. "Clathrina cribrata". Sponges of the NE Atlantic. Marine Species Identification Portal. Retrieved 2014-02-05.


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