pore cells
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.
The guard cells regulate the exchange of gases between the leaf and air through the use of openings called stomatal pores.
sponges obtain energy by obsorbing food through their pores.
A sponge eats and breathes by filtering water through its body. Different cells perform these life processes. Water flows through numerous pores in the sponge's skin. These pores lead into a central cavity, the spongocoel, which is lined with choanocytes, or collar cells. Each collar cell has a flagella, a tiny whiplike structure that creates a current to help draw
moving ocean water carries food and oxygen through the sponges pores and the sponge removes food and oxygen form the water and at the same time carbon dioxide is released
Allow materials to enter and leave the sponge
through its pores and holes
Materials that are porous, that is, that have pores or open areas within the material where gases or liquids can enter, will absorb and hold water as well as other materials. A good example is a sponge, which absorbs water through pores or openings and holds it inside.
Water is brought through cilia-lined pores into the hollow cavity of the sponge. As water passes through the pores, the cilia trap oxygen to breathe
ostium
ostium
yes, materials pass in and out of the nuclear envelope through the nuclear pores
yes, materials pass in and out of the nuclear envelope through the nuclear pores
flagella
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.
tiny "whips" on the cells inside a sponge draw water in through the pores of thesponge. Food is then removed from the water before it leaves through the opening at the top of the sponge .
Pores