No, they are from the Phylum Porifera.
Corals and Jellyfish are cnidarians, sponges are not.
Cnidarians and Sponges are invertebrates
No. Sponges have their own phylum called Porifera.
That is not accurate. Cnidarians actually have a simple coelom called a gastrovascular cavity, which functions in digestion and circulation. Sponges, on the other hand, lack a true coelom and instead have a porous body filled with channels for water circulation.
Cnidarians.
sponges have central cavity and sea anemone have gastravascular cavity
Sponges, Cnidarians, Mollusks, and Echinoderms are not Arthropods.
A cavity that both digestive and circulatory serve are called cylindrical. This is the purpose of cnidarians.
Sponges have no proper body cavity or coelom. However, in the everyday sense of the expression, there is a cavity inside sponges, which is called a spongocoel.
Extracellularly in a digestive cavity.
No, sponges do not have stinging cells like those found in cnidarians (e.g., jellyfish and sea anemones). Sponges are filter feeders that rely on water flow to capture food particles, rather than using stinging cells for prey capture.
nooo.