Plenty of animals are sessile, meaning attached to something like a plant. They include sponges, anemones, corals, barnacles, and sea squirts. Their larva larvae do swim around, though corals can reproduce by budding.
Plenty of animals are sessile, meaning attached to something like a plant. They include sponges, anemones, corals, barnacles, and sea squirts. Their larva larvae do swim around, though corals can reproduce by budding.
There are animals that are sessile, meaning anchored in one spot, such as sponges, anemones and barnacles. However, their larvae are free-swimming, and they can move their legs or tentacles, and in case of sponges they can move on a cellular level (but then again so can plants :P).
Yes, they are called sessile. A good example is the barnacle.
All animals move, though a butterfly in a cocoon can't really move, I guess....
sessile orgs.
There is no animal that cannot move.
rock, tree, patatoe and statues
Sessile Animals like corals
Daniasur
Languidly.
Protists that have animal-like characteristics are categorized as protozoans. The protozoan group is further subdivided by the way in which the protozoans move. The categories include sacordinians which move using pseudopod, zooflagellates which move using flagella, ciliaphorans which move using cilia, and sporozoans which form spores.
That would be muscle tissue.
No symmetry
A fox is an animal that has 4 legs. It uses these to walk.
click on the animal you want to move, and a list will pop up click on move and move the animal where you want to it to go
A statimal?
barnacle
yes they do move.
dead cat
No
Animal Adventures - 1992 On the Move was released on: USA: 10 April 1999
Muscle cells move bones which move animals.
There can be no less then 4 animals and no more then 8. Eventually another animal will move in or one might move out.
to move
A dead cat
animal