“…Sponges were reported to vary in characteristics such as the complexity of their aquiferous system, tissue density, pumping rate, abundance of microbial symbionts, morphology, and exploitation of different nutrient sources (Reiswig, 1971(Reiswig, , 1974Vacelet and Donadey, 1977;Reiswig, 1981;Wilkinson, 1983). More contemporary work has expanded this story by identifying substantial interspecific variation in growth rates, reproductive effort, community composition and diversity of microbial symbionts, reliance on different heterotrophic nutrient pools, microbial symbiont nutrient transformations, metabolic plasticity, and chemical defense production (Loh and Pawlik, 2014;Wulff, 2017;McMurray et al, 2018;Pawlik et al, 2018;Pita et al, 2018;Zhang et al, 2019;Bell et al, 2020). Despite this wealth of research, both classic and contemporary papers frequently group species based on one characteristic (i.e., sponges either host productive symbionts or do not, have either high or low microbial abundance, or are either chemically defended or undefended); this trend toward binary categorizations has led to broad generalizations about sponge ecology and evolution (Wilkinson and Cheshire, 1990;Loh and Pawlik, 2014;McMurray et al, 2018).…”