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In the bathroom, kitchen or utility closet - Phylum Porifera consists of sponges.
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genus, species, kingdom, phylum, class, order, there might be another one.
In the bathroom, kitchen or utility closet - Phylum Porifera consists of sponges.
You might find a product made from an animal of the phylum Porifera (sponges) in your kitchen, specifically in the form of cleaning sponges or bath sponges. Many of these sponges are now synthetic, but natural sponges are still used in some products due to their unique properties.
THE ANSWER IS D IN YOUR BEDROOM (MADE INT A DELICATE GARMENTIN YOUR BUREAU)
Our close relative phylum are the echinoderms because they are also deuterostomes.
Molluscs - The molluscs or mollusks, compose the large phylum of invertebrate animals, known as the phylum Mollusca. Around 85,000 extant species of molluscs are recognized. Snails, slugs etc.
Animal Testing : Monkey Testing There are no test cases defined. The testers/users are given the application/product to test on. The users just get into the system and take different path. The idea here is to break the application. To discover loopholes which a developer might have overlooked. For several reasons: 1. To make sure the product is safe. 2. The company might want to see the long term and short term affects on the product. 3. The company might want to see if the animals like that product better then other products.
At one time it did, but not anymore. Currently rat poison is an anticoagulant. This is much safer for animals (or humans) that might be in contact with the product.
Company try not to use animals for product testing. There are sophisticated breakthrough that mimic the texture of our skin that will help them to test their new lines of product. However, companies are still allowed (and in some cases required--if you come up with a brand new ingredient the government requires it be tested on animals for product safety) to test on animals. I looked up Dior's animal testing policy and no one's really sure what it is. They probably don't test the finished formula on animals, but might buy from suppliers who test. Every company that sells their products to the Chinese market is testing their products on animals. Unfortunately, Dior is one of them.
I think it might be called Porifera. ( If I am wrong please re right this. )