Yes
Bacteria belong to the domain Bacteria. Within this domain, they are classified into multiple phyla such as Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria. These phyla contain various orders, classes, families, genera, and species of bacteria with diverse characteristics and functionalities.
A domain is bigger than a phyla. A domain is the highest level of biological classification, encompassing multiple kingdoms. Phyla belong within the kingdom level of classification.
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Phyla is the plural of phylum. One phylum, many phyla.
- a domain is the highest level of organization - within a domain, there are kingdoms - withing kingdoms, there are phyla (singular phylum) - within phyla are classes - within classes are orders - within orders are families - each family contains one or more genera - each genus contains one or more species
An exoskeleton is an external skeleton that protects and supports the animal's body. Two phyla that have exoskeletons are Arthropoda and Heterokontophyta.
All phyla contain invertebrates. The only one that contains vertebrates is the phylum Chordata, but it also contains some invertebrates.
Some common phyla in the domain Bacteria include Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Cyanobacteria. Each phylum contains diverse groups of bacterial species with unique characteristics and functions.
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.
In the Linnaeus system, organisms within the same class contain similar phyla. Classes are one taxonomic rank above phyla and encompass groups of organisms that share similar characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
There are around 35 recognized animal phyla and 11 recognized plant phyla, making a total of approximately 46 phyla across the animal and plant kingdoms.