coelenterateJelly fish have a body plan that is described by biologists as coelenterate. They are eyeless, brainless, boneless and made up of 95% water.
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Radial symmetry is how biologist describe a jellyfish's body plan. It means that the body parts radiate from a central axis.Jellyfish have body types that are dubbed coelenterate, which means they have a body that looks like a sac. They have no real bones or skeleton in their bodies.
it don't plan nothing because it don't have a brain
Jellyfish are bell shaped and roundworms aren't. Jellyfish sting and roundworms do not. jellyfish are radial and and roundworms are not.
You have described body plan of a medusa...... and a jellyfish is a good example of a medusa.
No, polyps are the anchored versions, anemones and hydras and such. The umbrella is called a medusa, or jellyfish.
A sac body plan is a simple body organization found in some animals, where the body consists of a central cavity surrounded by a single layer of cells. This cavity acts as a digestive chamber where food is taken in and digested. Examples of animals with a sac body plan include cnidarians like jellyfish and sea anemones.
The phylum Cnidaria has two layers of tissue: the outer epidermis and the inner gastrodermis separated by a jelly-like mesoglea layer. This simple body plan is characteristic of organisms like jellyfish and sea anemones.
The Body Plan of a Frog is a Bilateral symmetry, vertebrate any animal that looks the same on both sides; that hav a top, bottom, sides, front and back it is a Bilateral symmetry. Which is most animals. Ussually only things like JellyFish are not.
Earthworms and insects both display very apparent segmentation. Human beings are also considered to be segmented, with the upper and lower jaws, hyoid bone, vertebrae, and ribs are all evidence of this. Jellyfish do not display segmentation.
The first body plan is a Medusa bosy plan which is like a jellyfish the one above is a medusa. the mouth it located at the bottom of the body. The appendeges are also located at the bottom. A polyp (on the right) ,like a sea anemone, has the appendeges at the top along with the mouth. They are also attached to solid ground unlike Medusas.
the body plan