Buds?
Sponges can regenerate the entire organism from just a conglomeration of their cells. They can be cut up or mashed, and as long as they have two special cells called collencytes, which produce the gelatinous matrix in the sponge, and archeocytes, which produce all the other cells in the spongeâ??s body, the sponge will reform into the sponge it once was. Although, it will look different.
About 21
No, your body is still growing.
It was called "Stand By Me"
It is called ectoplasm, and it comes out of the body when there are powerful séances.
buds or budding
buds or budding
A sponge's defenses are spikes in the sponges body.
Sponges have no proper body cavity or coelom. However, in the everyday sense of the expression, there is a cavity inside sponges, which is called a spongocoel.
sponges have no cells which means no tissues and that means no organs because of what the cycle is there would not be any organs in the body of a sponge
Sponges can regenerate the entire organism from just a conglomeration of their cells. They can be cut up or mashed, and as long as they have two special cells called collencytes, which produce the gelatinous matrix in the sponge, and archeocytes, which produce all the other cells in the spongeâ??s body, the sponge will reform into the sponge it once was. Although, it will look different.
The sponges are Acoelomates. That is they don't have coelom or body cavity.
a sponge is an invertabrate it has no back bone some sponges have holes in the body so they can breath and capture food. sponges skin is made out of soft spongey tissue.
The three classes of sponge skeletons are siliceous or glass sponges (Class Hexactinellida), calcareous sponges (Class Calcarea), and sponges with a fibrous protein skeleton (Class Demospongiae). Each class has unique structural characteristics that support the sponge's body.
A network of spongin or spicules.
To protect the sponge's body.
Sponges have a single body cavity known as the spongocoel . The spongocoel is critical to the food gathering strategy of sponges.