I don't know that for which I ask you
The body of a sponge is covered in tiny openings called pores. These pores allow water to flow in and out of the sponge, which helps the sponge filter out food particles and oxygen from the surrounding water.
A flagellated cell that sweeps water through a sponge's body is called a choanocyte. Choanocytes have a flagellum that creates a current to bring water through the sponge's pores, allowing for filter feeding and gas exchange to occur within the sponge's body.
Red finger sponges typically live in warm water, as they thrive in tropical and subtropical regions where water temperatures are higher. They are found in coral reefs and other shallow marine environments with warm sea temperatures.
The small intestine is the primary organ in the body that absorbs water, nutrients, and electrolytes from food and drink. Specifically, the jejunum and ileum, which are parts of the small intestine, play a crucial role in water absorption.
help move water through the organism's body.
no porifera only location in see water
The scientific name of sycon is Sycon sp. because it belongs to the genus Sycon, which encompasses various species of marine sponge.
The common name of sycon is "Sycon sponge" or simply "sycon." It belongs to the class Calcarea within the phylum Porifera and is characterized by its tubular shape and intricate canal system. These sponges are typically found in marine environments and exhibit a unique skeletal structure made of calcium carbonate.
Sycon, a type of marine sponge, is called a filter feeder because it obtains nutrients by filtering small particles, such as bacteria and plankton, from the water. Water enters the sponge through tiny pores, passes through a series of canals lined with specialized cells called choanocytes, which trap and ingest food particles, and then exits through a larger opening. This efficient filtering process allows sycon to thrive in its aquatic environment by extracting essential nutrients while also helping to maintain water quality.
Sycon sponges are filter feeders that sift microscopic particles of food from the water that passes through them.
It's basically a question of balance. Let's say you put a sponge soaked in freshwater into sea water. The sponge represents land, and the water in it is the ground water. At the beginning, the water presssure inside the sponge is pretty much the same as the pressure outside the sponge, so there isn't really anything pushing the sea water in, because the fresh water is pushing back equally hard. Now you put a straw into the sponge(drill a well), and start sucking the fresh water out. Suddenly, there's less freshwater pushing the sea water back, and it will begin to seep in.
Phylum Porifera or Sponges are the invertebrates are simple animals,live in water,cannot move from one place to another and have foul smell. Examples are: Sponges Sycon Spongilla Euplectelea .
The binomial nomenclature of sycon is Sycon ramosum. This species belongs to the phylum Porifera, commonly known as sponges. The name reflects its genus, Sycon, and its specific epithet, ramosum.
The leucon type can feed the most cells, then the sycon type, then the simplest ascon type. ^^
No because it makes filter-feeding impossible for the sponges No because it makes filter-feeding impossible for the sponges
it is present in phylum poriferaThey are vas like marine animals they lack mouth digestive cavity etc.
A sponge