@Detmer_Sipkema @hauke_smidt@BeckingLisa@BenBlueExplore@GeorgSteinert Happy to hear that another collaborative study just got published!
Congratz to Indra, @Detmer_Sipkema & all other coauthors to that nice study
https://t.co/u8wNhvwLY7
Our sneezing sponges 🤧 are now also in the print version of the #NewYorkTimes
Actually it was in the science section yesterday, but was only in stores on Hawai'i today...
The perks of #islandlife
😝
@FAME_IBED_UvA @IBED_UvA@UvA_Science@SpongeLoop
The sneezing #sponges were featured in 250+ news articles around the world! 🤧 One more video? Small critters eat the sponge mucus, making the sponge a vital part of the ecosystem 🪱
[Kornder et al. Current Biology] @KornderA@SpongeLoop @FAME_IBED_UvA @CurrentBiology
New study by #IBED@KornderA and colleagues shows that sponges 'sneeze' to get rid of waste. Beautiful time-lapse shows the mucus collecting at central points and the sponge sneezing 👇
@FAME_IBED_UvA @SpongeLoop Credit: Daniel Stoupin (Current Biology, Kornder et al.)
a big thank you to study authors @KornderA, @SpongeLoop Jasper de Goeij, Yuki Esser and @SallyLeys for chatting with me and to Ben Müller for the beautiful sponge pics 📸 many thanks to @VibrioSoup as well for his ocean invertebrates & microbes wisdom🪸 🦠
Sponges sneeze life into the reef! Our new study by @KornderA et al. show that sponges release mucus-bound particles from the outflow opening, transport them on their surfaces, and release them with a sneeze in the environment!
#spongeloop @FAME_IBED_UvA
Fascinating new study by @KornderA and colleagues @IBED_UvA in @CurrentBiology: Sponges ‘sneeze’ to clear their water channels. With a sneeze 🤧 the sponge releases a type of mucus that is eaten by other animals 👉 https://t.co/oMiDcBcwrQ
Here is the study:
Niklas A. Kornder, Yuki Esser, Daniel Stoupin, Sally P. Leys, Benjamin Mueller, Mark J.A. Vermeij, Jef Huisman, Jasper M. de Goeij,
Sponges sneeze mucus to shed particulate waste from their seawater inlet pores,
Current Biology,
2022
https://t.co/QNU9A1utL7