Jellyfish sting their prey using nematocysts, also called cnidocysts, stinging structures located in specialized cells called cnidocytes.
Jellyfish sting their prey using nematocysts, also called cnidocysts, stinging structures located in specialized cells called cnidocytes.
The scientific name of a stinging cell phylum is cnidaria. The stinging cells are located on the tentacles of cnidarians.
Jellyfish and Sea Anemone have stinging cell.
The "Stinging Cells" of a Jelly Fish are designed to paralyze it's prey. So when it becomes entangled and stung, the fish can slowly move it's dinner to the rest of the body.
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The stinging cells in a jellyfish are located in it's tentacles.
No, most cnidarians have stinging cells, not sponges.
Stinging cells are cells that "sting" and pour toxins into the bloodstream, and tentacles are long appendages that have no relation whatsoever to stinging cells.
Usually stinging cells belong to the phylum Cnidaria
Ctenophores lack stinging cells while Cnidarians possess stinging cells .
Stinging Cells
The stinging cells in the hydra is what helps it paralyze its prey. Once it uses its stinging cells to paralyze it, the hydra then uses its tentacles to push into itsslef considering that its only one cell layer thin.
Yes.
no
Stinging Cells
Stinging cells are found in phylum Cnidaria (hydra,jelly fish).These are present for defense of these animals along with nematoblasts(these are present for attack or offense)