The lugworm has Bilateral symmetry, look at the site earthlife.net for more info! i pretty sure that it is bilateral because worms or phylum Annelida is bilateral.
Bilateral Symmetry
Bilateral symmetry
yes! he has bilateral symmetry.
Their early larvae have bilateral symmetry, but as they get bigger they develop fivefold symmetry. This is apparent in the regular sea urchins, that have roughly spherical bodies, with five equally sized parts radiating out from their central axes.
not all penguins have symmetry but it is most likely that they will.
Eels are fish, so, like all vertebrates, have bilateral symmetry. This means they have symmetry across one plane (known as the sagittal plane, and directly down the centre of their body), which means one side of their body approximately mirrors the other side.
yes
No, they aren't.
All worms are invertabrates.
there is the body, the tentelectula and the fwipper (like toes)
small crabs eat bacteria and lugworm
Lugworms are annelids, so they therefore belong to the annelida phylum.
bacteria , lugworm(when it doesn't do its job propelly!), barnicles.
It in symmetry with sentence a is what? What is a sentence with symmetry in it? This sentence with symmetry is symmetry with sentence this.
Lugworm
Reflection symmetry, reflectional symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, mirror-image symmetry, or bilateral symmetry is symmetry with respect to reflection
line symmetry, rotational symmetry, mirror symmetry &liner symmetry