* Trilobozoa * Porifera * Placozoa * Vendobionta * Cnidaria
* Myxozoa * Ctenophora * Acoelomorpha * Orthonectida * Dicyemida * Gnathostomulida * Cycliophora * Micrognathozoa * Rotifera * Acanthocephala * Gastrotricha
* Platyhelminthes * Phoronida * Brachiopoda* Bryozoa * Entoprocta * Nemertea * Sipuncula * Mollusca * Hyolitha * Echiura * Annelida * Chaetognatha * Nematoda * Nematomorpha * Priapulida * Kinorhyncha * Loricifera * Onychophora * Tardigrada * Arthropoda * Vetulicolia * Xenoturbellida * Echinodermata * Hemichordata* Chordata Sometimes, are considered invertebrates also Kingdom Protozoa (not true animals), which phyla are:
* Amoebozoa * Choanozoa * Cercozoa * Foraminifera * Radiozoa * Apusozoa * Loukozoa * Percolozoa * Euglenozoa * Metamonada * Myzozoa * Ciliophora * Heliozoa
Porifera (sponges)
Coelenterata (jellyfishes and sea anemones),
Platyhelminthes (flatworms),
Aschelminthes (rotifers, horsehair worms, and roundworms),
Mollusca (snails, bivalves, squids, and octopuses),
A kingdom contains similar phyla.
There are more than 15. I counted 51 but it is probably more by now because my list is a little old (1995). They are divided into groups but there are 16 groups on my list Chromobionts, Chlorobionts, Euglenozoa, Rhodophytes, Cryptomonads, Dinozoa, Chytrids, Choanoflagellates, Polymastigotes, Rhizopod sarcodines, Actinopod sarcodines, Microsporidia, Haplosporidia, Apicomplexans, Myxozoa and Ciliates.means of locomotion.
There are far too many invertebrate species to list. Note that there are far more invertebrate species than vertebrate species. However, I here are a list of invertebrate phyla: Acanthocephala (a phylum of worm) Acoelomorpha (a phylum of worm) Annelida (a phylum of worm) Arthropoda (spiders, crabs, etc) Brachiopoda Bryozoa Chaetognatha (a phylum of worm) Cnidaria (corals, sea anemones, jellyfish, etc) Ctenophora (comb jellies) Cycliophora Echinodermata (sea urchins, starfish, etc) Echiura (a phylum of worm) Entoprocta (a phylum of worm) Gastrotricha Gnathostomulida (a phylum of worm) Hemichordata (a phylum of worm) Kinorhyncha Loricifera Micrognathozoa Mollusca (octopi, clams, etc) Nematoda (a phylum of worm) Nematomorpha (a phylum of worm) Nemertea (a phylum of worm) Onychophora (a phylum of worm) Orthonectida Phoronida (a phylum of worm) Placozoa Platyhelminthes (flat worms) Porifera (sponges) Priapulida Rhombozoa Rotifera Sipuncula Tardigrada (Water bears, which are microscopic animals that live in and eat moss. They look like caterpillars). Xenoturbellida (strange flatworm)
tabulate the distinct characteristic of the different phyla of algae
invertebrate
The evolutionary order of invertebrate phyla are sponges, cniderians, and bilaterians. The origin of invertebrate phyla begin in the Precambrian times.
There are many phyla of invertebrates. Please click on the related link below to see an article that lists the invertebrate phyla.
phylum mollusca
Platyhelminthes
All invertebrates except Porifera possess nervous system .
There are more than two phyla in the animal kingdom... There are many phyla in the animal kingdom. There are a few phyla of worms and other invertebrates and then you have the vertebrate ohyla. Unless that's what your asking? Did you want the invertebrate and vertebrate in general phyla? That's the only set of 2 things I can think of.
The only common groups for them would be the Doman Eukaryia and the kingdom Animalia, beyond that they are separated into a number of invertebrate phyla; those phyla being every single animal phyla except for Chordata.
An invertebrate is an organism without a backbone.
Protostome: any member of the lower invertebrate phyla in which the mouth appears before the anus during development, cleavage is spiral and determinate, and the coelom forms as a splitting of the mesoderm.
1.)any invertebrate of the phyla Cnidaria or Ctenophora 2.)of or relating to coelenterates
There are differences within the different phyla (sub-order) of invertebra but they all differ from vertebrae in the lack of cerebialization, they lack one brain. Some phyla like mollusks have pair masses of neurons termed ganglia that handle different functions, like eating or movement.
They are not alive and there for do not have a phyla.