Sponges live in saltwater lakes, sea, and oceans. Some sponges live in freshwater.
Sponges are animals of the phylum Porifera
No, kitchen sponges nowadays are usually made from cellulose or synthetic plastics. Real marine sponges were used by early Europeans to also clean, but it was stopped due to overfishing that almost brought the sponges to extinction.
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.
Sponges are Eukaryotic. They are multicellular, and their cells contain membrane-bound organelles.
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.
WHO LIVES IN A PINEAPPLE UNDER THE SEA Sponges do.
spongebob lives in bikini bottom
No because it makes filter-feeding impossible for the sponges No because it makes filter-feeding impossible for the sponges
sponges can live up too six thousand years having sex
Fish, crustaceans, mollusks, sponges, corals, and thousands of organisms and microorganisms.
Sea sponges are found in a variety of habitats in the ocean, from shallow coastal waters to deep-sea environments. They typically attach themselves to hard surfaces like rocks, coral reefs, or the ocean floor. Sea sponges can also be found in both warm and cold waters around the world.
Sponge bob lives under the sea so a Maltese sponge must live in Maltese sea.
There are a lot of creatures that live in coral reefs such as sponges, sea urchins, starfish, clams, marine and of course fish
No, sea sponges are not decomposers. Sponges are filter feeders.
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 sponges are not unicellular.
No, sponges are not parasitic.