Abstract
The aquiferous systems of two Indopacific Oceanapia species (Oceanapiidae) were studied by corrosion casts: O. amboinensis living in shallow lagoons and O. fistulosa living at the base of the reef slope. Both species show a massive, entirely buried body, emerging from the sediment only by long, completely close fistules. Particularly in O. fistulosa the corrosion casts revealed a complex, grape-like structure of the choanosome organised in anatomical and functional units composed by an incurrent web whose anastomosed meshes are crossed by a central excurrent canal. A system of thin canals connects the two systems giving rise to an area of choanocyte chambers. The corrosion casts revealed that in both species incurrent water penetrates into the sponge body by the fistules and that it is expelled through specialised structures buried in the sediment. This observation is in accordance with field experiments performed on O. fistulosa. In some specimens of this species, a solution of china ink injected into plastic bags enveloping the external fistules was observed, after waiting for a while, to flow through the buried structures.
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