sessile. This term is good for any animal that doesn't move: barnacles, sea-squirts, tube worms.
No Sponges dont move in water....! (:
sponges are made up of individual cells. I dont know about colentrates. They just are what they are. sponges also don't move while coelenterates do.
sponges dont move, they are anchored to a solid surface all their lives. They can however reproduce asexually by budding, thus the budds would drift for a while before becoming attached to another surface and growing
no
they dont.
Animals that don't move because they have afixed themselves to a spot permanently are called "sessile" animals. Some examples are barnacles, sponges, hydroids and corals.
Sponges are sessile, meaning they do not move. Once a sponge chooses a place to be, it usually remains there for life.
yes, it is
cnidarians move from place to place. sponges dont.
all sponges are beneficial in the kingdom of porifera because sponges do not move and do not harm any other organisms
all sponges dont have teeth, so they eat small plankton.
No, barrel sponges do not migrate. They are sessile organisms, meaning they are permanently attached to a surface and do not move from one place to another. Barrel sponges rely on water currents to bring them food and oxygen.