Sponges can die if they are exposed to air, starved, improperly placed, or experience algae overgrowth. The will also die, or course, if they are eaten by a predator.
There are many types of sponges you can use for cleaning. Examples of these are cellulose sponges, abrasive sponges, natural sponges, and dry sponges. The best one would depend on the cleaning surface. It is best to use soft sponges such as the natural sponge to clean fragile surfaces. To clean rough surfaces an abrasive sponge would do the trick.
Because sponges have seawater to carry nutrients and waste.
No other animals are believed to have evolved from sponges, thus they win the title of "an evolutionary dead end."
filter feeders! : )
Sponges
sponges are really only one color which is yellow A)you can die sponges,so really they can be any color but they are mostly yellow
Yes , but they mostly die of people pulling them out of the water which is where they get their oxygen. When sea sponges are born they move through the water until they find a spot then they stay there for years if someone pulls them out of their spot or out of the water then they instantly die.
They die alone in little houses.
maybe because they can play with it or if they eat it they can die.
Sea sponges can only survive in saltwater, so if you put them in freshwater, they will quickly die. They are also very sensitive to air and do not like to be taken out of the water because their pores get filled with air. If too many of their pores are filled with air, they will die.
No, sea sponges are not decomposers. Sponges are filter feeders.
no sponges are not unicellular.
no sponges do not have bones
No, sponges are not parasitic.
Sponges are asymmetrical, although a few species have nearly radial symmetry.
To answer your question no sponges do not hibernate
Yes sponges have organs.