true.
are made of one or more cells.
need energy to stay alive.
respond to stimuli in their environment.
grow and reproduce.
maintain a stable internal environment.
Answer:
look
Explanation:
Flatworms, roundworms, and segmented worms are all invertebrates. Some species of each type of worm are free-living, meaning they are not dependent on another organism.Some are parasitic.
Flatworms belong to phylum Platyhelminthes. They do not have a coelom, respiratory system or a circulatory system.Tapeworms flukes are examples of flatworms.
Roundworms are part of the phylum Nematoda. They are bilaterally symmetrical invertebrates.They have a psuedocoelom. Ascaris lumbricodes is the most common human parasite.
Segmented worms are the most complex animals of these three invertebrates. They are placed in Annelida. Segmented worms have a true coelom, a circulatory system and a digestive system.An earthworm is a segmented worm.
Although tapeworms have segmented bodies, they do not belong to the phylum Annelida due to key biological differences. The segments in tapeworms are reproductive and not involved in locomotion or digestion, unlike in Annelids, and their nervous systems are structurally different.
The body of a tapeworm is indeed segmented, but it does not belong to the phylum Annelida because there are key differences in their biological make-up. Annelids, such as earthworms, have bodies made up of similarly structured segments with a central nervous system. Moreover, these segments have the potential to function independently.
On the contrary, tapeworms, which belong to the phylum Platyhelminthes, while they have segmented bodies, their segments don't have an independent functional capacity. In tapeworms, these 'proglottids' are reproductive in nature and not involved in locomotion or digestion like the segments in Annelids. Additionally, their nervous systems are structurally different from that of the Annelida.
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Answer:Alleles
Explanation: