Finger sponges do not have any type of symmetry. Finger sponges can grow fingers where ever they have space so they are asymmetrical.
The finger sponge is a species of demosponge that is found in shallow waters of the Caribbean Sea. It also belongs to a family called Iotrochotidae.
yes, it is like a hydra from the cnidarian family.
Bilateral
Yellow Encrusting Sponge Myxilla lacusnosa Sponges are the simplest of the multicellular animals. They have no organ systems and are characterized by numerous canals and chambers that open to the outside by way of pores which giving this phylum its name. Many sponges are asymmetrical, but some exhibit radial symmetry. They are almost plant-like in their simplicity and are often confused as being plants. The body plan of a typical sponge is shown in figure1. Water (carrying suspended plankton and other potential food) enters numerous small pores called ostia (singular, ostium). The ostia are surrounded by donut-shaped cells called porocytes that open and close to control water flow. For the sponge depicted in figure 1, water flows directly into an open chamber called the spongocoel (the term "coel" refers to an open space or body cavity in an animal). Water leaves the spongocoel by a larger opening (the osculum).
Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: PoriferaClass: DemospongiaeSubclass: CeractinomorphaOrder: PoeciloscleridaFamily: MicrocionidaeGenus: HolopsammaSpecies: laminaefavosa
Radial symmetry or Assymmetry
Sponges really don't have any kind of symmetry.
Sponges really don't have any kind of symmetry.
A sponge has no symmetry, and is therefore asymmetrical.
Sponges mostly have no symmetry, but it is possible to have a sponge that exhibits radial symmetry. They never have bilateral symmetry.
A sponge has no symmetry, radial or bilateral.
no, it is asymmetrical
yes
A sponge has an asymmetrical symmetry. So they don't have a definite shape.
One animal that has radial symmetry is a sea sponge.
Sponges are asymmetrical, although a few species have nearly radial symmetry.
A red finger sponge lives in warm water