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thefigtreeforum:

‘Extinct’ giant sponges, once used as bath tubs, are rediscovered 
The giant Neptune’s Cup sponge, last seen in 1908, was believed extinct until divers recently spotted one off the coast of Singapore.
By Bryan Nelson
It’s the sponge that takes the idea of a sponge bath to a whole new level: the giant Neptune’s Cup. First discovered in 1822, these sponges once grew so large that they were commonly used as bath tubs for children. However, that handy use quickly led to overharvesting, and the last time anyone saw one alive was in 1908. Many believed the sponges had become extinct.
That was until March of this year, when biologists doing a routine survey dive along Singapore’s coast spotted something that none of them could immediately identify. Of course they couldn’t: a living Neptune’s Cup sponge hadn’t been spied for more than 100 years.
But there it was — two of them, in fact, just 50 meters from one another. Sponge expert Lim Swee Cheng, author of the book “A Guide to Sponges of Singapore,” was called in to confirm the finding, according to a report by Scientific American.
With diameters measuring 30 centimeters across, the pair of newly discovered sponges are tiny compared to legend, which described heights of more than a meter and diameters wide enough to hold a bathing human. These new discoveries are just babies, say scientists — but they are growing fast. And their presence may indicate that a more stable population exists nearby.
“The presence of two young Neptune’s Cup sponges within a surveyed area of 50m by 50m signals hope that more are present within the area,” said marine biologist Karenne Tun, one of the scientists to rediscover the species. “More importantly, [it] points to the possibility of adult populations present within Singapore’s coastal waters.”

thefigtreeforum:

Extinct’ giant sponges, once used as bath tubs, are rediscovered

The giant Neptune’s Cup sponge, last seen in 1908, was believed extinct until divers recently spotted one off the coast of Singapore.

By Bryan Nelson

It’s the sponge that takes the idea of a sponge bath to a whole new level: the giant Neptune’s Cup. First discovered in 1822, these sponges once grew so large that they were commonly used as bath tubs for children. However, that handy use quickly led to overharvesting, and the last time anyone saw one alive was in 1908. Many believed the sponges had become extinct.

That was until March of this year, when biologists doing a routine survey dive along Singapore’s coast spotted something that none of them could immediately identify. Of course they couldn’t: a living Neptune’s Cup sponge hadn’t been spied for more than 100 years.

But there it was — two of them, in fact, just 50 meters from one another. Sponge expert Lim Swee Cheng, author of the book “A Guide to Sponges of Singapore,” was called in to confirm the finding, according to a report by Scientific American.

With diameters measuring 30 centimeters across, the pair of newly discovered sponges are tiny compared to legend, which described heights of more than a meter and diameters wide enough to hold a bathing human. These new discoveries are just babies, say scientists — but they are growing fast. And their presence may indicate that a more stable population exists nearby.

“The presence of two young Neptune’s Cup sponges within a surveyed area of 50m by 50m signals hope that more are present within the area,” said marine biologist Karenne Tun, one of the scientists to rediscover the species. “More importantly, [it] points to the possibility of adult populations present within Singapore’s coastal waters.”

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