Phylum Porifera
Class Calcarea
Order Clathrinida
Order Leucosoleniida
Order Sycettida
Order Leucettida
Class Hexactinellida
Class Demospongiae
Order Haplosclerida
Order Poecilosclerida
Class Sclerospongiae
With about 5000 species known across the world. Sponges are primarily
marine, but around 150 species live in fresh water. Sponges have
cellular-level organization, meaning that that their cells are
specialized so that different cells perform different functions, but
similar cells are not organized into tissues and bodies are a sort of
loose aggregation of different kinds of cells. This is the simplest
kind of cellular organization found among parazoans.
sponge belongs to branch PARAZOA, Phylum PORIFERA
Sponges are in the phylum Porifera. They are the only "group" in this phylum, composed of approximately 5000 species.
sponges belong to the group echinoderm. an echinoderm is a radially symmetrical organism that lives on the ocean floor and has a spiny internal skeleton.
inverdibrates
Sponges belong to Phylum Porifera .
what are the five vegetable subgroups
Christianity subgroups--Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant Judaism subgroups--Orthodox, Conservative, Reform Islam--Sunni, Shiite Buddhism--Mahayana, Theravada There are myriad subgroups of these subgroups and more than I've listed here--please add on--
Yes. The group {0,1} has precisely 4 subgroups.
yes
No, sea sponges are not decomposers. Sponges are filter feeders.
The subgroups of monera are heterotrophic and autotrophic. Heterotrophic are basically the types of bacteria, meanwhile autotrophic is a type of blue-green algae.
no sponges are not unicellular.
No, sponges are not parasitic.
no sponges do not have bones
hi members, i have been faced with the same question. but this was my idea. to answer this question, we should ask ourselves the following quetions. * what are the subgroups of cases? * what can you learn from calculating summary statistics seperately for subgroups of cases? * how can you graph summary statistics for subgroups? with these questions answered then you have answered the whole question. H. IKOBA
Yes
the mulluska and poripera