An adult sponge is anchored to the sea floor and doesn't move around but it does have cillia that cause water current to flow through the body of the sponge. Larval sponges will swim using their cillia.
most sponge species go through a motile phase in their larval development. most end up being sessile but there are a few motile sponges.
Sponges are normally stationary organisms, they attacj=h themselves to a surface when very small and grow in that same place.
Protista are both motile and nonmotile. Protists are heterotrophs and autotrophs. Protista are unicellar. Archeae are unicellular and motile and non motile.
motile algae can move or float while non motile stays where it is.
most people believe that plantae are motile
non
sea sponges are Non-motile seeing as they are connected to the ocean floor and rocks
Sponges look like plants. They do not appear to move and they are firmly attached to their substrate as if by roots. Unless you follow a sponge's life cycle, and see that the young sponges are motile, swimming freely in the water, and observe that sponges are not photosynthetic, obtaining their food by filtering microscopic organisms from the water, you might be confused.
Sponges are normally stationary organisms, they attacj=h themselves to a surface when very small and grow in that same place.
If an organism is motile then it can move. Plants are not motile.
Motile - The Moving or having the power to move spontaneously: motile spores. Archaea bacteria is motile.
Plasmodium are motile.
Fungi are non motile means they are not able to move.
motile
Protista are both motile and nonmotile. Protists are heterotrophs and autotrophs. Protista are unicellar. Archeae are unicellular and motile and non motile.
They have legs and can walk so theyre motile
motile algae can move or float while non motile stays where it is.
Yes they are motile