Acropora aculeus
Acropora anthocercis
Acropora aspera
Acropora austera
Acropora carduus
There are hundreds if not thousands of species in the phylum Cnidaria.
phylum :Cnidaria class : Anthozoa order : gorgonacida
Yes, species in the Class Phylum Cnidaria do have a Ganglion.
They belong to the phylum Cnidaria, named after the stinging cells that species in the phylum use to catch prey.
Jellyfish are in the Phylum: Cnidaria
The phylum of the box jellyfish is Cnidaria. The kingdom for the box jellyfish is animalia and the class is Cubozoa.
Jellyfish do not have backbones therefore they are known as invertebrates. Jellyfish belong to the to the phylum Cnidaria group of species.
There are A LOT of differences between the Cnidaria phylum and other phylums. 1. all species in the cnidaria phylum have nematocysts which are the things that sting prey 2. jellyfish which are in the cnidaria phylum, do not have blood because they are made up of 95% of water 3. all species of cnidaria phylum have a single opening which means they eat and poop from the same place 4. can live anywhere from the tropics, to the poles, on the surface of the water, to the depths of the seas (some even bury themselves under the ocean bed) 5. have two different "stages" - polyp and medusa - some species of the cnidaria phylum just stay at the polyp stage and never move on to the medusa stage
In the Phylum Cnidaria there are quite a few classes; Anthozoa, corals Cubozoa, box jellies Scyphozoa, jellyfish Hydrozoa, hydras Each of these classes have numerous orders, families and genera and species of their own. There are 215 scyphozoans, for example and thousands of anthozoans...
Yes. Coelenterates are the same as Cnidaria.
CnidariaPhylum: Cnidariaits in the cnidaria phylum
All corals are in the phylum Cnidaria.