Want this question answered?
it carries blood
There are 2,000 pounds in a net (short) ton.
No, cnidarians such as hydra don't have a centralized nervous system, theirs is rather diffuse. They have neither brain nor ganglia.
The total net gain of 36, Glycolosyis. The net gain of 2 Aerobic cellular respiration for a net gain of 34.
There are many forces acting on a body. But, the moves because of the net force acting on it. So, we can say that the body accelerates because of net force acting on it only.
The hydra has a nervous system characterized by a nerve net. A nerve net is a collection of separate, but "connected" neurons. Neurons are connected by synapse. Communication between neurons can be in both directions at the synapse within a nerve net. The nerve net is concentrated around the mouth. Unlike higher animals, the hydra does not have any grouping of nerve cell bodies. In other words, there are no ganglia. The hydra does have specialized cells for touch and chemical detection.
no, just a nerve net which is a collection of separate neurons
A nerve net is a type of simple nervous system that is found in members of the cnidaria and echinodermata phyla . Nerve nets consist of interconnected neurons lacking a brain or any form of cephalization. This nervous system allows cnidarian to respond to physical contact. They may then detect food and other chemicals in a rudimentary way. Although the nerve net allows the animal to respond to its environment, it has trouble alerting the animal from where the is coming. For this reason, simple animals with nerve nets, such as haunda, will typically respond in the same way to contact with an object, regardless of where the contact occurs. Hydra, which are cnidarians, have a nerve net throughout their body. On the other hand, , which are echinoderms, have a nerve net in each arm, connected by a central radial nerve ring at the center. This is better suited to controlling more sex movements than a diffuse nerve net .
A nerve net is a type of simple nervous system that is found in members of the cnidaria and echinodermata phyla . Nerve nets consist of interconnected neurons lacking a brain or any form of cephalization. This nervous system allows cnidarian to respond to physical contact. They may then detect food and other chemicals in a rudimentary way. Although the nerve net allows the animal to respond to its environment, it has trouble alerting the animal from where the is coming. For this reason, simple animals with nerve nets, such as haunda, will typically respond in the same way to contact with an object, regardless of where the contact occurs. Hydra, which are cnidarians, have a nerve net throughout their body. On the other hand, , which are echinoderms, have a nerve net in each arm, connected by a central radial nerve ring at the center. This is better suited to controlling more sex movements than a diffuse nerve net .
yes sea anemones have a nerve net.
Nerve Net was created on 1992-09-01.
Jellyfish do not have specialized digestive, osmoregulatory, central nervous, respiratory, or circulatory systems. A jellyfish does not have a brain or central nervous system, but rather has a loose network of nerves, located in the epidermis, which is called a "nerve net". A jellyfish detects various stimuli including the touch of other animals via this nerve net, which then transmits impulses both throughout the nerve net and around a circular nerve ring, through the rhopalial lappet, located at the rim of the jellyfish body, to other nerve cells.
Nerve Net
Grasshopper
Nervous responses in Cnidarians are controlled by a diffuse web of interconnected nerve cells called a nerve net.
neuroepithelial cells
Specialized equipment.