All species of dolphins are mammals, and all mammals have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side.
Whales, like all vertebrates, have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side.
Killer whales are mammals, which are vertebrates, and like all vertebrates they have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side.
Bottle-nose dolphins, like all vertebrates, have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side.
Symmetry
bilateral
They exhibit bilateral symmetry.
Most animal phyla exhibit bilateral symmetry, where the body can be divided into two mirror-image halves along a single plane. This body plan is thought to have evolved for efficient movement and coordination in organisms.
No it has complex symmetry
Bilateral Symmetry
Annelids (such as earthworm and leeches) have bilateral symmetry.
Symmetry in biology is the balanced distribution of duplicate body parts or shapes. The body plans of most multicellular organisms exhibit some form of symmetry, either radial symmetry or bilateral symmetry or "spherical symmetry". A small minority exhibit no symmetry (are asymmetric).
Sponges are asymmetrical. Organisms in Cnidaria have radial symmetry while organisms in Arthropoda exhibit bilateral symmetry.
The nematodes(members of phylum Nematoda) exhibit bileteral symmetry.
Sponges are asymmetrical, although a few species have nearly radial symmetry.
bilateral symmetry
Like all mammals, jaguars exhibit bilateral symmetry with the backbone as the median.
Annelids (such as earthworms) have bilateral symmetrical.