Hexasterophora

Hexasterophora are a subclass of sponges, in the class Hexactinellida.[1] The Hexasterophora first appeared in the Ordovician and is separated into five recent orders, including the Lyssacinosa, the Hexactinosa, and the Lychniscosa, all of which have living representatives in the seas today.

Hexasterophora
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Porifera
Class: Hexactinellida
Subclass: Hexasterophora
Schulze, 1886
Orders
  • Hexasterophora incertae sedis
    • Dactylocalycidae
  • Lychniscosida
  • Lyssacinosida
  • Sceptrulophora

Hexasterophorans have skeletons composed of overlapping six-rayed spicules.[1] The sponge is commonly firmly attached by its base to a hard substratum; less often rooted by the anchoring spicules and rarely inserted directly into the loose bottom sediments. The three groups are differentiated by the extent of fusion of adjacent spicules.

The Lyssacinosa, Hexactinosa, and Lychniscosa appear sequentially in the fossil record. The least fused group, the Lyssacinosa, appears in the Ordovician, while the intermediate group, the Hexactinosa is known from the Devonian. Finally, the Lychniscosa, with the most tightly interlocking spicules is first found in rocks of Triassic age.

Notes


gollark: It is. The signs clearly say so.
gollark: I mean, it isn't *most* of the time, and isn't now.
gollark: LyricLy wasn't looking at the *actual* ௮, which is rated that, but somehow managed to think a *bee processing plant* was a lethal cognitohazard.
gollark: No, that's pretty safe actually.
gollark: Especially LyricLy. Considering the current situation.
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