Tiny white tree-looking algae?

Fritz05

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I have many of these white, small (<1/4 inch) algae (?) on my rocks. Does anybody have an idea what they are?

IMG_0867.JPEG
 

BristleWormHater

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I have many of these white, small (<1/4 inch) algae (?) on my rocks. Does anybody have an idea what they are?

IMG_0867.JPEG
I found nothing online except another thread on r2r suggesting it could be a type of sponge but that thread never resolved. This is something for @ISpeakForTheSeas
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

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I have many of these white, small (<1/4 inch) algae (?) on my rocks. Does anybody have an idea what they are?

IMG_0867.JPEG
Any chance you could get a clear, close up pic of just one little cluster of them? Being able to see the details of the branching/base more can be useful for these ID's.
 

BristleWormHater

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Thank you. I just pressed my phone on the glass and used a flashlight to make sure there was enough light.
No you are definitely a professional photographer my phone pics look like a big foot photo and my hands are shakier than a 90 year woman having a heart attack.
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

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They are actually soft and move in the flow.
Interesting - I know there are some soft bryozoans, but they're not common that I've seen.

Texturally, this doesn't look right for a sponge, though. Any chance you could get some microscope pics of a sample of it? Or, do you know if these send out any really tiny feeding crowns/polyps/etc. like hydroids, feather dusters, corals, etc.?
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

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Here my attempt at a picture of a piece of it under a microscope.
IMG_0722.jpeg
Any chance you could do a more zoomed out microscope pic?

The goal would be to show a portion of one of the branches zoomed out enough to see both sides of the branch, but close enough to see details like if there are polyps/zooids on the branch.
 

vetteguy53081

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I have many of these white, small (<1/4 inch) algae (?) on my rocks. Does anybody have an idea what they are?

IMG_0867.JPEG
This is likely sponge and typical location especially is there is low flow in that area
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

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Here another attempt.
I would guess a bryozoan from the taxonomic order Ctenostomatida (a Ctenostome bryozoan), some of which are known for being gelatinous/soft-walled. Unfortunately, I don't know enough about the order to narrow it down from there, but a bryozoan would be harmless.
 

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