this is a very interesting question the answere is niether they are a sexual meaning they just split apart and create two worms that is why they have seven hearts
earthworms are hermaphrodites because they contain both male and female reproduction parts
The trick to this is that earthworms are hermaphrodites. This means that the have both male and female sexual parts. Therefore, there is no difference between earthworms as to whether they are male or female.
the answer is the earthworms has both body parts.
They have both male and female reproductive organs.
earthworms
Earthworms are hermaphrodites, meaning every earthworm has female and male body parts, as in testes and ovaries. However, they do need a mate to reproduce. They line up with their head ends facing away from each other and exchange sperm through the seminal receptacles.
Nope - Earthworms are hermaphrodites - in that they have both male and female reproductive organs. During mating they exchange sperm - and lay eggs a few days later which hatch into tiny earthworms.
The correct answer is, no, they do not have a specific gender. Earthworms are known as androgynous, meaning that the organism has both male and female organs. So if you would have to say they have a gender, androgynous would be the answer.
It contain a full set of remale and male sex organs
Yes earth worms are hermaphrodites. This means they have both male and female sex organs.
No not all flowers have both male and female parts, and some plants have totally separate male and female flowers.Plants that have either male or female floral parts, but not both are called Dioicous ("two houses")Plants that have both male and female floral parts are called Monoicous ("one house")While many angiosperms seem to have both anthers and ovules they may not, whereas gymnosperms are very good examples of Diocious flowers.
fruit are only seeds that have no male or female parts