Most types of sponges have asymmetrical bodies. There are around 10 thousand different types of sponges found in bodies of water all over the world.
If you mean horizontally asymmetrical there are 15: BCDEFGJKLNPQRSZ If you mean vertically asymmetrical there are 17: AFGJLMNPQRSTUVWYZ
asymmetrical
crooked , disproportional
Asymmetrical
Yes. If one or two of the sides are of a different length than the other/s, it would make it an asymmetrical triangle.
Most types of sponges have asymmetrical bodies. There are around 10 thousand different types of sponges found in bodies of water all over the world.
Sponges are asymmetrical, although a few species have nearly radial symmetry.
an asymmetrical body plan
Sponges are asymmetrical. They have no symmetry.
Nope, there are some that are asymmetrical. Like sponges.
Finger sponges do not have any type of symmetry. Finger sponges can grow fingers where ever they have space so they are asymmetrical.
Asymmetrical are organisms, such as sponges, that have no true symmetry.
sponges have no symmetry animals with radial symmetry are radiata and cnidaria, like jellyfish
Many animals are asymmetrical, especially internally.
Phylum Porifera sponges have radial symmetry.
Sponges are asymmetrical. Organisms in Cnidaria have radial symmetry while organisms in Arthropoda exhibit bilateral symmetry.
No. It is radial, which means that its body s centered o one point. Other symmetry for animals are asymmetrical and bilateral. Asymmetrical means an animal has no symmetry. Sponges are asymmetrical. Bilateral means that the animal is symmetrical if you cut it in half. Humans, dogs, ants, and many other animals are bilateral. Hope I helped!