it belongs to Vertebrate and class Aves (birds)
There are four different phylums that fungi may belong too. Entomophthoromycotina, kickxellomycotina, mucoromycotina, and zoopagomycotina are the phylums that fungus can belong to.
A tornado is not a living thing. It does not belong to a phylum and it does not have larva.
No, animals within the same class do not necessarily belong to the same phylum. Classes are a more specific classification within a phylum. Animals in different classes within the same phylum may share certain characteristics, but they can also have distinct traits that differentiate them from one another.
Because a class is a group of phylums.
Phyla Mollusca and Annelida have trochophore larvae. These larvae are characteristic of the early stages of development of certain marine invertebrates, where they display a ciliated, free-swimming, planktonic form.
phylums
There are three phylums that contain worms. Platyhelminthes are the flat worms, Nematoda are the round worms, and Annelida are the segmented worms. The Bearded Fireworm is a part of the Annelida phylum because its body has segmentation.
all of the worm phylums do
No, Porifera isn't a kingdom, it is the phylum of the sponges. Jellyfish belong to the phylum, Cnidaria, which includes jellyfish, corals, sea pens, and sea anemones. Both phylums, as well as six others, belong to the kingdom of Animalia. Poriferas branched the earliest of all the phylums of the Animalia kingdom, before tissues even evolved. Cnidarians branched next, with radial symmetry and two layers of epithelial tissues, but before bilateral symmetry emerged.
Phylum's can be found all over. Some examples of where you can find a phylum is dirt, rivers, lakes, trees and bushes.
Sub-phylum is a taxonomic group. A phylum can contain many sub-phylums which contain a huge diversity of species.
Vertebrates belong in the phylum Chordata.