Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish)
Shark
Phylum: Chordata
SubPhylum: Vertebrata (vertebrates)
The shark belongs to the phylum Chordata.
The taxonomy for a great white shark is as follows: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Chondrichthyes Order: Lamniformes Family: Lamnidae Genus: Carcharodon Species: Carcharodon carcharias
Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataSub-Phylum: Vertebrata (vertebrates)Class: Chrondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish)Sub-Class: Elasmobranchii (sharks and rays)Order: LamniformesFamily: LamnidaeGenus: CarchardonSpecies: C. carcharias
Phylum Aschelminthes
A pig belongs to the phylum Chordata.
Hamsters belong to the phylum Chordata.
Sharks belong to Phylum Chordata.
The phylum of the hammerhead shark is Chordata.
yes it is it's in chordata phylum yes it is it's in chordata phylum
The kingdom a hammerhead shark is in is the hammer kingdom.
read the name: shark. it is a type of shark. under the phylum of fish (that's not the scientific name, of course)
The frog human and a shark
No its not an animal or mammal. it is classified in the class "Fishies" of phylum vertebrates.
The scientific classification of the great white shark:Domain: EukaryaKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: ChondrichthyesOrder: LamniformesFamily: LamnidaeGenus: CharcarodonSpecies: carcharias
No, not even close! To give you an idea (the most widely used) scientific classification hierarchy is Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, species. Animals in different Kingdoms are the least similar with animals of the same species being the same. Sharks are from the Phylum Chondrichthyes, Reptiles the Phylum Chordata (humans also belong to the Phylum Chordata) and so are very different
Sharks are a group of fish with a skeleton of cartilage instead of bone. There are over 470 species of shark ranging from the dwarf lanternshark (6.7 inches long) to the whale shark (39 feet long). Their phylum is Chordata (having a backbone), and class is Chondrichthyes (cartilage skeleton).
The Genus of the tiger shark is Galeocerdo, and they are of the species G. cuvier. It is the only animal that is part of this genus.
The goblin shark gets its name from its unique shaped head which resembles a goblin. These fish live at extreme depths and are rarely seen by humans.