Yes
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylum#Animal_phyla
The plural form of the noun 'phylum' is phyla.
Plants are classified into divisions, classes, orders, families, genera, and species. Animals are classified into phyla, classes, orders, families, genera, and species. The main difference is the higher taxonomic level at which the classifications begin for plants (division for plants and phyla for animals).
A grouping of plants similar to the phylum of animals is called a division or phylum. Just like animals are categorized into phyla, plants are categorized into divisions based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. Each division represents a large group of plant species with common characteristics and ancestry.
Yes, Phylum is the category beneath Kingdom. In the Kingdom Animalia or Metazoa all animals are contained, further organised into phyla.
The phyla classified in Deuterostomia are Echinodermata and Chordata. These phyla exhibit a unique pattern of embryonic development where the blastopore becomes the anus, and radial cleavage occurs during cell division.
no idea what the anwser is
These are the number of currently ranked phylum Animals phylum:35 Plant Divisions:11 Fungi Divisions:6 Bacterial:29 Archaeal Phyla/Division:5
SCOTLAND
Do you mean, 'How many phyla are there on Earth?' There are more than 20 phyla of bacteria, over 30 phyla of animals and 12 phyla of plants. Fungi and protists, who knows.....? Add up all these phyla, and you can see there is quite a lot.
The Porifera, or sponges
phyla?
its the oxygen and dicrogen is observed