No, because their nostrils get filled up with water and they drown. Any other brain busters??
in the water
but they also live in moist soil
yes they do they sometimes live around the world except from deserts
They excrete water through the use of protonephridia.
They live in marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. They also live in the bodies of host animals, including mankind, worldwide.
Yes; most of them live underwater.
yes
no
Containing the most primitive flatworms, the class Turbellaria consists of nine orders and a total of about 3,000 species, most of which are free-living. While some species live in moist, dark areas on land, most live at the bottom of marinewater. These flatworms are found in all seas, too.
Cilia allow flatworms to move in a gliding motion.
'haemocoel' - meaning blood space
There are merely seven.
In order for sexual reproduction to take place in a flatworm, two flatworms must come together and mate. When mating happens, the flatworms transfer sperm to each other.
Flatworms can be either parasites, which live in their hosts, or planarians, which are marine (water) oriented.
they live in a host or under water they live in a host
I Think It Lives In The Water Where It Is Deep And Dark.
They live in flat water. nah just jokes i dont know. i think salty
aquatic
they sleep in the water
Platyhelminthes are flatworms. However, because there are many different types of flatworms like Turbellaria and Cestoda, there can be different types of predators. For example, Turbellarians, which are free-roaming flatworms and can live in fresh or salt water environments, have predators that include diving beetles, crustaceans, aquatic insects, tadpoles, and small fish. Some flatworms also may prey upon other flatworms.
no
they swim under water and they are yuck
Flatworms
most the time they live on live rock but they are usually found on corals as well.
Flatworms are divided into two groups, parasitic and nonparasitic. The parasitic types, which live off of other organisms, consist of Cestoda, Trematoda, and Monogenea flatworms.