Jelly fish are radial symmetrical
radial
sponges have no symmetry animals with radial symmetry are radiata and cnidaria, like jellyfish
Sponges are asymmetrical. They have no symmetry.
a bobcat has bilateral symmetry because bilateral symmetry is where it mirrors each other
A sponge has no symmetry, and is therefore asymmetrical.
They are animals that are bilateral, they can be split into two perfectly into two, the parts that lie opposite of the axis of the worm is identical.
No, anything in phylum Cnidaria (including corals) have radial symmetry
Radial symmetry - jellyfish, starfish.Bilateral symmetry - horse, human
Bilateral Symmetry - Right down an animal (Worm or fish)Radial Symmetry - Symmetry like a circle (E.g - Starfish)Asymmetrical - No symmetry
Because they have 2 eyes, they are usually listed as bilaterally symmetrical.
A jellyfish has radial symmetry. A jellyfish is part of the cnidaria species of animals and they generally have radial symmetry. Radial symmetric organisms are like a pie in terms of their shape. THey have no left or right sides. If you were to turn a radial symmetric animal on its side, it would like the same as it did prior.
Elephants, like all mammals and other vertebrates, have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side. They are definitely not asymmetrical; nor do they have radial symmetry.
The snail's body itself is bilateral symmetry. The shell it creates is not.A snail has bilateral symmetry but its shell has radial symmetry.PS. It is radial not radical.