a crazy guy named Steve
Basolateral
No, a free swimming form of a cnidarian is called a medusa. Polyps are typically attached to a substrate and have a cylindrical body with a mouth surrounded by tentacles at one end. Medusae have a bell-shaped body with tentacles hanging down.
No, an octopus would be an example of a mollusk (not a cnidarian).
Cnidarian do have muscles
The broad ligament attaches the uterus to the walls and floor of the pelvis.
Polyp
a crazy guy named Steve
a crazy guy named Steve
sponge?
They are similar because both cnidarian and a sponge is that they both live in water.
Medusae
polyp
Medusa
Medusa
The life cycle of a typical cnidarian involves an alternation between two main forms: the polyp and the medusa. The polyp is a sessile, asexual stage that attaches to a substrate, often reproducing by budding to form new polyps. In contrast, the medusa is the free-swimming, sexual stage that produces gametes through sexual reproduction. Fertilization results in a planula larva, which eventually settles and develops into a new polyp, completing the cycle.
Yes, coral is a cnidarian.
An adult swimming cnidarian is called a medusa.