The essential structural difference between hydra and tapeworm is that while Hydra

a

has tentacles, tapeworm is parasitic

b

is diploblastic, tapeworm is triplobastic

c

has a mouth, tapeworm feeds by suckers

d

has mesoderm, tapeworm has mesogloea

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b

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Atere Jr
11 years ago

Diploblasty is a condition of the ovum in

which there are two primary germ layers:

the ectoderm and endoderm.

Diploblastic organisms are organisms which

evolve from such an ovum, and include

cnidaria and ctenophores.

The endoderm allows them to develop true

tissue. This includes tissue associated with

the gut and associated glands. The ectoderm

on the other hand gives rise to the

epidermis, the nervous tissue, and if

present, nephridia.

Simpler animals, such as sea sponges, have

one germ layer and lack true tissue

organisation.

All the more complex animals (from flat

worms to man) are triploblastic with three

germ layers (a mesoderm as well as

ectoderm and endoderm). The mesoderm

allows them to develop true organs.

Triploblasty is a condition of the blastula in

which there are three primary germ layers:

the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm.

The germ layers form during gastrulation of

the blastula. Additionally, the term may

refer to any ovum in which the blastoderm

splits into three layers. All higher and

intermediate animals (from flat worms to

humans), arise from a triploblastic ovum.

Triploblastic organisms are organisms which

evolve from such an ovum. Generally

speaking, triploblastic organisms belong to

the Bilateria subregnum. Triploblastic

organisms generally possess bilateral

symmetry which is where the clade Bilateria

takes its name.

Habibat02
2 months ago

this is wrong because;Hydra is diploblastic (true) and tapeworm is triploblastic (true), but this is not the essential difference taught in basic biology. but the difference is that hydra uses mouth for feeding while tapeworm uses suckers. so this is the exact difference between both organisms . pls Myschool try to make correction to this

a7046146828
2 months ago

🌿 Answer: B. is diploblastic, tapeworm is triploblastic ✅
Explanation:
The main structural difference between Hydra and tapeworm lies in their embryonic tissue layers.
Hydra is a simple organism that is diploblastic, meaning it has two germ layers: the ectoderm (outer layer) and endoderm (inner layer). It lacks a true mesoderm, which makes it structurally simple.
Tapeworm, on the other hand, is a triploblastic organism, meaning it has three germ layers: ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. The presence of the mesoderm allows it to have more complex tissues and organs, even though it is parasitic.
Other options are less precise:
Tentacles or parasitic nature (A) describe lifestyle, not essential structural differences.
Mouth vs. suckers (C) is a feeding adaptation, not a fundamental tissue-level difference.
Mesoderm vs. mesoglea (D) is partially correct, but the key distinguishing feature is diploblastic vs. triploblastic.
This explanation makes it clear why B is the correct answer.

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