It doesn't have any spaces between it.
spongy mesophyll is the air spaces in a plant that allow air to diffuse among the cells which are producing and releasing both CO2 and O2. Thus the answer is the area where gas exchange occurs
Sponges are filter feeders. This means that they pull water through their bodies and eat whatever they can filter out of it. The more folds and spaces that a sponge has, the more spaces there are for it to filter. This is the reason that sponge bodies are full of holes and spaces.
Yes, because of the voids (air spaces).
Oh that's quite simple. Find a sponge and get a bowl. Put the sponge in the water and explain how the pores in the sponge suck in the water as you put pressure on it. As you squeeze it explain that the pores release the water through them.
Sponge is solid yet it is compressible the presence of the inter particle spaces or voids which are filled with air and make it compressible.
A sponge contains a lot of pore space that are filled with air or water at any given time. Squeezing a sponge temporarily collapses these pore spaces and forces the air or water out.
Sponges can absorb liquids based on their porosity, which is the amount and size of empty spaces within the sponge. Liquids that are more viscous or have higher surface tension may be harder for the sponge to absorb because they do not flow as easily into the empty spaces of the sponge. Additionally, some liquids may chemically react with the material of the sponge, affecting its ability to absorb them.
The mesohyl, formerly known as mesenchyme, is a gelatinous matrix within a sponge. The mesohyl resembles a type of connective tissue and contains several amoeboid cells, fibrils, and skeletal elements. For hundred of years, it has been largely accepted that sponges lack true tissue, but it is currently debated as to whether mesohyl and pinacoderm layers are in fact tissues
Sponge and cotton are absorbent.
The artistic sponge has meaning.
Loofa sponges are a product taken from a squash and are not a "real" sponge.
The artistic sponge has meaning.