no
During Mitosis
Interphase
From stage of the cell cycle do cells somtimes exit?
no
I think this is its larva stage
medusa
They don't move because they do not have a medusoid stage of life cycle. They expel their gametes into the environment to form a another polyp when eggs are fertilized through a planular larva
It is wrong as Medusa stage is dominent in Scyphozoa .
The sensing functions include a nerve net, a network of nerve cells that surround the hydra's body. The nerve net enables the hydra to respond to stimuli and coordinate its movements.. Jellies have the medusa body form. Medusas move freely about in the water, transported by wind, water currents, and rhythmic contractions of the "umbrella." Some cnidarian life cycles include both a medusa stage and a polyp stage. Others exist only as medusas. Still others such as hydras and sea anemones exist only as polyps.
You really cannot compare the cycle of a butterfly to a hydra because a hydra is a fictional character from mythology. A hydra is a multiple headed monster.
medusa, the polyp is the sessile stage
Medusa wasn't married, but she was Poseidon's girlfriend at one stage.
Medusa wasn't married, but she was Poseidon's girlfriend at one stage.
HYDRA
Most hydras alternate between an asexual polyp stage and a sexual medusa stage, though the best-known Hydrozoan, Hydra, never becomes a medusa, spending its whole life as a polyp.
Medusa is a stage in life cycle of Cnidarians eg. Obelia in which medusae are produced by budding in blastostyl.Medusa possess sex organs i.e. testes and ovaries which produce gametes i.e. sperms and eggs which fuse to form zygote which develops in second stage of life cycle called a Polyp . Possession of two alternating stage in life cycle of Cnidarians is called Metagenesis .
A moth has a 4-stage life cycle.