The Grus americana does not belong to any plant groups, flowering or fern. It's an animal, as the scientific listing below indicates. The Kingdom is "Animalia", meaning that Grus americana is an animal, while the Phylum is "Chordata", which means it belongs with the group of vertebrate animals, and the Class is "Aves" and that indicates it's feathered and lays eggs. This species is listed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services, Endangered Species List, and according to the listing status, the Grus americana is an "endangered" bird. The following is the full scientific classification for the species "Grus americana", or as they are more commonly known, the WhoopingCrane; * Kingdom: Animalia * Phylum: Chordata * Class: Aves * Order: Gruiformes * Family: Gruidae * Genus: Grus * Species: Grus americana For more details, please see sites listed below.
Yep.
A clam is an invertebrate , it belongs to Mollusca .
Bird...go Penn Foster Vet Tech! lol
The whooping crane, grus americana, is in the crane family, gruidae.
No, moss is not a flower. It belongs to nonflowering group of plants known as Bryophytes
Fungi is neither vertebrate nor invertebrate. Only members of the kingdom Animalia can be invertebrates or vertebrates, and fungi is not a member of that kingdom. It belongs to the kingdom Fungi.
A rotifer is in the phylum Phylum Rotifera and belongs to the invertebrate kingdom
A fly is an invertebrate. All of them. No exceptions.
No, a narwhal isn't an invertebrate. Instead, it has a backbone. It belongs to the Chordate phylum, which has mostly vertebrate members. It also belongs to the class of Mammals, which all have backbones.
A clam is an invertebrate , it belongs to Mollusca .
It belongs to the invertebrate class: Trematoda
Neither Vertebrates and Invertebrates are classifications of members of the animal kingdom used in taxonomy a flower is part of a plant that belongs to a different kingdom all together