No.
they effecting the coral they effecting the coral
Most jellys are axially symmetrical. Let's do a quick "thingie" to see what that is. Picture a dinner plate on a table. Stand a candlestick on it in the middle. That candlestick is the axis here, and the plate is symmetrical around or about the candlestick. Most jellys are symmetrical in that way.
coral polyps are soft bodied invertebrate that make up coral
Coral is a carnivore and eats only meat while some people think that coral is a prouducer.
Jellyfish and coral polyps are both species that are not bilaterally symmertrical, they are radially symmetrical, as are sea anemones which are also related to those species.
is a arrow symmetrical
No. Socks are not symmetrical.
No but an isosceles trapezoid is symmetrical.
Yes, it is symmetrical
You can think of a coral as a sort of colonial anemone; each coral polyp is like one anemone. They have a skirt of tentacles for capturing food, a pharnyx for ingesting and egesting. They have the same tissue layers. They both have stining cells called nematocysts. They are radially symmetrical.
Pentagons can be symmetrical, but are not always so.
The space it occupies isn't symmetrical.
It's horizontally symmetrical.
No the white house is not symmetrical
3 and 8 are symmetrical numbers!
yes it is a symmetrical shape