Does a sea star have radial symmetry? Yes, a sea star does have radial symmetry,
I would say it is asymmetrican, not radial or bilateral.
The sea stars symmetry is radial symmetry as well as jellyfish.
Starfish
Yes, they do.
Bilateral.
Some have asymmetry, but most have radial symmetry.
Yes they do, most aquatic animals like coral and stuff like that have radial symmetry.
Echinoderms (ex: starfish), cnidarians (ex: jellyfish) and and some vermiforms have longitudinal radial symmetry.
Radial Symetry :)
Deuterostomes that show radial symmetry in their adult form called phylum Echinodermata. Phylum Echinodermata are things like sea stars, sea urchins and sea cucumbers.
The phylum Echinodermata has radial symmetry as adults. These organisms include sea stars, sea urchins, and sand dollars, among others. Radial symmetry means that body parts are arranged around a central axis, like the spokes of a wheel.
Symmetry in animals of the phylum is typically categorized as radial or bilateral. Radial symmetry is when an organism can be divided into equal halves in multiple planes around a central axis, like a sea anemone. Bilateral symmetry is when an organism can be divided into two equal halves along just one plane, like a human.