The surface of the orange puffball sponge is covered with small pores that filter small particles of food from the water that passes through them. Each sponge has flagella that help move the water through the sponge.
A puffball.
black orange
No. An orange is a fruit, not a molecule, though an orange does contain macromolecules.
No. Fungi absorb nutrients, though they then process them accordingly. They don't manufacture their food in the way photosynthising plants do.
Some plants produce puffball seed heads. The dandelion is the most familiar example, which have round, whitish-gray seed heads. Individual seeds are dispersed by the wind and are borne by tiny parachutes, called pappi (sigular: pappus).
No, Giant Puffball mushroom cannot kill you there are no known poisonous types of puffball.
puffball puffball
The brown tube sponge Rope Sponge Antergia Blue Callispongia Orange ball sponge boring sponges
The brown tube sponge Rope Sponge Antergia Blue Callispongia Orange ball sponge boring sponges
The brown tube sponge Rope Sponge Antergia Blue Callispongia Orange ball sponge boring sponges
Puffball - novel - was created in 1980.
Puffball - film - was created in 2007.
The duration of Puffball - film - is 2 hours.
1) Orange elephant ear sponge. 2) Tube sponge. 3) Vase sponge. 4) Brown octopus sponge.
a sponge!
Type your answer here... The life cycle of a puffball is very interesting.....
No sponges have skeletons.