it has a base which produces a sticky material that makes them stick to a surface.
it moves by using its hydra offsprings to attache to the lower rib.
The adult hydra attaches to a substrate using its basal disc, which secretes a sticky substance to help it adhere in place. It extends its tentacles to capture and immobilize prey, which it then ingests through its central mouth opening.
it has a base which produces a sticky material that makes them stick to a surface.
Hydra feed using stinging nematocysts to catch small aquatic organisms, most commonly, copepods.
Hydras most commonly reproduce by budding in which as small juvenile, "polyp", grows on the stalk of it's body. When the polyp has matured, (or when the parent hydra dies), it will break off as a free swimming juvenile. In rare occasions, hydra reproduce sexually.
to kill hydras.
HYDRA
Step 1, A budd, looking like a bump will appear onto the adult hydra. Step 3, Tectancles that look like long strains will help the new to be hydra get food. Step 4, the new hydra will depart from adult hydra and will start it's journey by it's self. I am sorry I do not know step 2. Step 1, A budd, looking like a bump will appear onto the adult hydra. Step 3, Tectancles that look like long strains will help the new to be hydra get food. Step 4, the new hydra will depart from adult hydra and will start it's journey by it's self. I am sorry I do not know step 2.
No. But they feed on a few types of vertebre though.
Hydra are secondary consumers, primary consumers feed off of photosynthetic organisms. Hydra eat primary consumers like daphnia for example.
they feed on on adult whale's.
Hydra belong to the phylum Cnidaria and the class Hydrozoa.