This strange creature has never seen anyone before 2000, when a team from the Monterey Bay Institute of Aquaculture in California took a submarine at a depth of 2 miles off the coast operated remotely, taking two samples from this scientifically named anima .. Chondrocladia lyra .. picked up more than 10 videos and prepared a report for their analyzes in October 2012 in the Journal of Invertebrate Biology.
These sponges feed by clinging to the mud deposits at the bottom of the ocean and pick up the crustaceans through the barbed hooks, where they wrap the filaments with a thin membrane and begin to digest their prey slowly.