motile means those animals which are able to move [eg. animals] from one place to another which sessile animals [eg. sea anemone] are those which cannot move.
Most producers are sessile, meaning they are stationary and do not move from one place to another. This includes plants, algae, and some types of bacteria. These organisms generally rely on other means, such as wind, water, or animals, to disperse their spores or seeds for reproduction.
The giant squid (Architeuthis dux) is motile; they move themselves by a mechanism similar to jet propulsion. Sessile animals do not have brains, but the squid does.
no. Jelyfish have the ability to preform locomotion, so they are considered motile an example of something sessile would be a tree or a rock because they do not have the ability to move by their own power
Yes it is. Stabing the organism on a SIM medium, the medium will become cloudy, proving M. roseu's is motility.
Terrestrial animals cannot be sessile because they live on land. Sessile animals are aquatic and live in the water. +++ That's no the definition of "sessile". A sessile organism is one that anchors itself to one place for its life, or most of its life. Most do live in water but by no means all aquatic animals are sessile. Fish are not!
they are sessile
most people believe that plantae are motile
The opposite of sessile is motile. Motile organisms are able to move or change position on their own, as opposed to sessile organisms which are fixed in one place.
dont no
Fungi are non motile means they are not able to move.
Amoebas are motile, meaning they are able to move and change shape by extending and retracting pseudopods, which are temporary projections of cytoplasm. This allows them to move toward sources of food or away from unfavorable conditions.
Most producers are sessile, meaning they are stationary and do not move from one place to another. This includes plants, algae, and some types of bacteria. These organisms generally rely on other means, such as wind, water, or animals, to disperse their spores or seeds for reproduction.
Their larvae stages are motile stages.
Sessile organisms are immobile. So. I can't think of any animals. But plants are sessile. Edit: Corals (related to anenomes) and sponges are good examples of sessile animals, the latter has a motile larval stage before it settles on a substrate and becomes sessile.
Plants are primarily sessile, meaning they are rooted in place and do not exhibit significant movement. While some plants have evolved minor motile capacities for growth and response to stimuli like light, they are primarily classified as sessile organisms.
Bacterias are mobile ofcourse, because it does not have a special host to live inside the body of a human, after the process of rupturing into the same....... so it takes time to find the host (ie) after entering the human body. After it has found a permanent host inside the human body it stays sessile and continues its process.
The giant squid (Architeuthis dux) is motile; they move themselves by a mechanism similar to jet propulsion. Sessile animals do not have brains, but the squid does.