Jellyfish have an absolutely unique feature. This is that they can reversibly change from male to female and vice versa. They are motile, i.e., medusa form.
They depend on food and nutrition through a method called 'filter-feeding'.
They live in deep seas.
In Oceans .
No. Coelenterates are not chordates.
Coelenterates that are found on Cornish shores include the sea anemones, true jellyfish and hydroids.
Cnidaria (jellyfish, anemore hydra).
The term coelenterates is now out of date and has been replaced with two terms Cnidaria and Ctenophora. Animals covered by these terms are jellyfish sponges and coral like animals. So the water is where your most likely to find most of them.
Yes and no because sea anemone doesn't move and jellyfish moves
It's talking about jellyfish, coral, sea anemones 2. Coelenterates mean ''hollow Inside''
echinoderms (starfish, sea urchins), coelenterates (jellyfish), annelids (earthworms), nematodes, and other invertebrates (snails).
No, jellyfish are invertebrates. They have no spine/backbone.no, jellyfish is a not a vertebrate but instead it's an invertebrate which belongs to the phylum coelenterates...they don't have backbone..Coelenterates (cnidarians) are animals that have tentacles surrounding their mouth. The tentacles contain stinging cells that make it easy to capture their next meal, and contain poison to kill their prey. Some of the animals that are cnidarians are octopus, corals, hydra, sea fans, and sea anemones. ^^no a jelly fish is an invertebrateNo jellyfish are not vertebrates, there are invertebrates.
The jellyfish live in jellyfish fields.
Sponges are of the phylum porifera and are assymetrical invertebrates that have no true tissues due to a lack of cell specialization. Coelenterates are any of the phylum cnidariathat have radial symmetry and are invertebrates. Coelenterates include corals, sea anemones, jellyfish, and hydroids.
Some coenlenterates move while others do not. Jellyfish are examples of coenlerates that travel while sea anemes are examples of ones that are still.
Basically yes. There are a few exceptions where there is an alternation of generations (e.g. Jellyfish and other Coelenterates.