NaCl, also known as salt, can affect planaria by disrupting their osmoregulation. Planaria have a delicate balance of salt concentrations in their cells to maintain proper water and ion balance. Excess salt can cause dehydration, while insufficient salt can lead to swelling and bursting of cells in planaria.
In my search, the nemathelminthes is also a flatworm. An example of flatworm is planaria, it is also known as hermaphroditic animal because a hermaphroditic animal have a female and male organs. The planaria also has a line in middle of its body. It will be cut in to two and another planaria is produced.
I'm going to assume that you mean 23.34g of NaCl. 1 mole NaCl = 58.442g NaCl (the atomic weight of Na and Cl in grams) 23.34g NaCl x (1mol NaCl/58.442g NaCl) = 0.3994mol NaCl
540 g NaCl is equal to 0,54 kg.
yup NaCl in H20 yields Na+ and Cl- ions There is no chemical reaction since the salt merely dissolves in the water. You can take the water out & still have the salt. No new compound is formed though.
NaCl is the chemical formula of sodium chloride; NaCl is an inorganic salt.
The planaria class is Turbellaria
planeriacomes under kingdom animalea
no it does not
sp refers to a planaria where the actual species is undetermined...or sometimes because several species of planaria have similar appearance or behavior and have been used in a study.
Usually a planaria regeneration experiment involves cutting the planaria into different parts. The head can be separated from the tail or the planaria can be cut lengthwise, etc. After cutting the planaria, it will be observed for few days noting how the organism regenerate its lost body parts. Read more on planaria regeneration on t he link provided below.
Planaria prefer dark environments
The scientific name for planaria is flatworms in the class Turbellaria, with species such as Dugesia tigrina commonly used in research and education.
No
No, planaria do not do photosynthesis. They are free-living flatworms that are primarily carnivorous, feeding on small organisms in their environment. They rely on external sources of food for their energy needs.
Planaria images can be found in most high school or "first" biology/zoologycollege, text books.
Planaria falls under the kingdom of animalia. so some would be heterotrophic, multicellular, and eukaryotic.
Eukaryotic