No Sponges dont move in water....
! (:
They use the waves in the water to move around.
the only way they can move is by the water movement moving it around. It can not move by itself
They cannot but babies can move around by swimming.
yes, it is
No, sea sponges have nothing to hurt you with. They also have nothing to move. all they do is filter water
No, barrel sponges do not migrate. They are sessile organisms, meaning they are permanently attached to a surface and do not move from one place to another. Barrel sponges rely on water currents to bring them food and oxygen.
i don't know that's way ay asced you
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.
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 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 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.
Baby sponges are simply referred to as larva. At the larva stage, they swim around in the water, but full grown sponges attach themselves to reefs and don't swim or move around.