If it's a close rhyme scheme, then the word may need to be broken into two in order to come up with rhyming words that make sense. As an example, 'nema-' rhymes with the Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA; the stem hema- for words of or relating to blood; the female name of Sima from the Indian subcontinent; and the drink Zima. As another example, '-todes' rhymes with bodes, codes, goads, loads, nodes, odes, roads, and toads. The combination of the different rhyming possibilities with 'hema-' and '-todes' may yield such options as 'FEMA codes' of emergency response; or the drinking pleasure in sociable company that 'Zima bodes'.
Yes. Nematodes a multicellular.
Yes, nematodes have bilateral symmetry.
Nematodes belong to the roundworms or phylum Nematoda.
Nematodes are roundworms. Many of the 28,000 or more species of nematodes are parasitic. Nematodes are very successful organisms, living just about everywhere where there is life.
i think the benefits of nematodes is the safe way to fight pests
Nematodes can live on fish, in fish and fish can consume them.
Tom Goodey has written: 'Laboratory methods for work with plant and soil nematodes' -- subject(s): Nematoda 'Soil and freshwater nematodes' -- subject(s): Freshwater nematodes, Soil nematodes, Nematoda
No, nematodes do not have a fluid-filled pseudocoel as a skeleton. Nematodes have a hydrostatic skeleton, which is a combination of fluid pressure and muscles that provide support and movement. The pseudocoel is a body cavity that houses the internal organs in nematodes.
Way different...Annilids are a phylum of the lophotrochozoa and nematodes are a phylum of ecdysozoa...
what it is
what it is
no