The Ganglia is a part of the nervous system
The Ganglia is a mass of nerve tissue existing outside the central nervous system.
To make a long story short it's a brain.
Ganglia are nerve clusters. I don't know if flatworms have them or not; if they do, they probably function more or less like a rudimentary brain.
Ganglia are clusters of nerve cells. They are mostly associated with the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system in vertebrates, where their functions are particularly related to the activities of the heart, glands, and involuntary muscles..
The pedal ganglion supply nerves to the foot muscles of mollusks.
The ganglia is a concentration of nerves, analogous to the brain, best used for coordination.
Clams and many other lower-class animals have ganglia instead of brains. Ganglia are simply nerve clusters that function as a neurological control center (just like a brain).
The function of ganglia in the human body is to get information from the photoreceptors and collectively transmit image-forming and non-image forming visual information from the retina to regions in the brain.
Visceral ganglia refers to a pair of ganglia in mollusks, oysters, and other shellfish that are fused to or close to pleural ganglia because of pleurovisceral connections.
yes
terminal ganglia P.S. 100%, i am a teacher.
These collections are called ganglia. Ganglia often interconnect with other ganglia to form a complex system of ganglia known as a plexus.
no only insects and worms have a ganglia
the terminal ganglia