Just one. Even though its arms may suggest more, its head determines the one line of symmetry.
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
Asymmetry, Radial Symmetry, and Bilateral symmetry.
It has line symmetry (straight down the center) but not rotational symmetry.
An octopus has bilateral symmetry.
Pisces are fish and an Octopus is a cephalopod. For instance fish show bilateral symmetry and have a backbone while an Octopus has no backbone and shows 8 fold symmetry in part.
Bilateral symmetry.
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
they actually have radial symmetry...
Crustaceans, like all arthropods, 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.
OCTOPUS HAVE A BILATERAL SYMMETRY BECAUSE IF IT IS CUT IN HALF THE OTHER SIDE WILL BE JUST LIKE THE OTHER IT WILL BE LIKE A MIRROR VIEW
Just one. Even though its arms may suggest more, its head determines the one line of symmetry.
8, think about an OCTopus. 8 legs. 8 sides. C:
Basically round-ish things such as the octopus and the jelly fish but also, to some extent, the starfish.
Yes, a common octopus is a type of octopus
Yes they are. Symmetrical organization means when you can draw a line down the middle of the organism and the two sides look like mirror images. If you draw If you draw a line down the middle of an octopus you would find two sides with equal parts. Sponges and some coral are not symmetrical tho.