Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.
...the larynx, trachea, and lungs; the gastrointestinal tract (except mouth and anus), the urinary bladder, the vagina (in females), and the urethra. The term endoderm is sometimes used to refer to the gastrodermis, the simple tissue that lines the digestive cavity of cnidarians and ctenophores. Compare ectoderm; mesoderm.
In the hydra the musculoepithelial cells that cover the outer surface of the body have longitudinal muscle fibres; those that line the gut cavity (the gastrodermis) have circular muscle fibres. Sea anemones have all of the muscle fibres in the gastrodermis, though some of the fibres are longitudinal and some are circular. When the mouth of the sea anemone is closed, the water in the gut cavity...
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