You can feed planria egg, fish food, small pieces of raw meat. They are carnivores so they eat meat. Oh and I mean hard boiled egg.
Planaria exist only in fresh waters.
In my search, the nemathelminthes is also a flatworm. An example of flatworm is planaria, it is also known as hermaphroditic animal because a hermaphroditic animal have a female and male organs. The planaria also has a line in middle of its body. It will be cut in to two and another planaria is produced.
No, planaria are a type of flatworm and are not considered a bacteria. But, planaria are good for the ecosystem- so maybe it would be like a good type of bacteria that contributes to the functioning of the human body as it the planaria would fo the Earth. You sould really look up planaria, there are pictures and more.
A planaria belongs to the phylum Platyhelminthes.
i believe it is the Planaria Worm.
Both would be appropriate, as long as the planaria can reach that food source.
You dont have to feed planarias every day but at least 2 to 3 days
The planaria class is Turbellaria
Planaria are type of animals. Animals are not photosynthetic
planeriacomes under kingdom animalea
sp refers to a planaria where the actual species is undetermined...or sometimes because several species of planaria have similar appearance or behavior and have been used in a study.
Planaria exist only in fresh waters.
Usually a planaria regeneration experiment involves cutting the planaria into different parts. The head can be separated from the tail or the planaria can be cut lengthwise, etc. After cutting the planaria, it will be observed for few days noting how the organism regenerate its lost body parts. Read more on planaria regeneration on t he link provided below.
Planaria prefer dark environments
A planaria obtains food by using eyespots and special "smelling" cells to locate food. Then the planaria inserts a feeding tube and releases digestive chemicals. Then the planaria sucks up the half digested bits of food. Lovely, isn't it!
The scientific name for planaria is flatworms in the class Turbellaria, with species such as Dugesia tigrina commonly used in research and education.
yes