Yes, cnidaria is radially symmetrical. Like jelly fishes, they have a wheel and tube structure, which is radially symmetrical.
Symmetrical body plans first evolved in the phylum Cnidaria. Cnidarians include jellyfish, sea anemones, and corals, and many of them have radial symmetry. This means that their bodies are organized around a central axis, allowing them to have multiple planes of symmetry.
Cnidaria is the scientific name.
The phylum Cnidaria is comprised of animals that are radially symmetrical and have a jellylike material, called mesoglea, between two layers of cells.
CnidariaPhylum: Cnidariaits in the cnidaria phylum
phylum :Cnidaria class : Anthozoa order : gorgonacida
Jellyfish are in the Phylum: Cnidaria
The phylum of the box jellyfish is Cnidaria. The kingdom for the box jellyfish is animalia and the class is Cubozoa.
There are hundreds if not thousands of species in the phylum Cnidaria.
There are 5 classes of cnidaria: anthozoa (corals and sea anemones), scyphozoa (swimming jellyfish), staurozoa (stalked jellyfish), cubozoa (box jellyfish), and hyrdozoa (hydroids and siphonophores).
Yes. Coelenterates are the same as Cnidaria.
Phylum Cnidaria is theit taxonomic group .