Jellies are invertebrates.
Invertebrates
it is in the jelly fish category that is the vertebrates
The box jellyfish belongs to the phylum of Cnidaria. The class for the box jellyfish is Cubozoa and the order is carybdeida.
Cubozoa
The box jellyfish is an ocean invertebrate that belongs to the phylum of Cnidaria. It is in the kingdom of animalia and the class of Cubozoa.
No, jellyfish are invertebrates becasue they do no have a backbone.
Fish are vertebrates, jellyfish are invertebrates.
The phylum of the box jellyfish is Cnidaria. The kingdom for the box jellyfish is animalia and the class is Cubozoa.
A jellyfish is the medusoid stadium of animals belonging to phyum Cnidaria, subphylum Medusozoa, which include: * class: Scyphozoa * class: Cubozoa * class: Staurozoa* class: Hydrozoa (only some hydrozoans have a medusoid stadium, so not all of them have jellyfishes) * class: Polypodiozoa Jellyfishes scientific names are ruled by the ICZN (International Code of Zoological Nomenclature). Each species must be identified with the genus name followed by the specific name (binomial nomenclature).
Stings of some species of the class Cubozoa and the Box jellyfish, such as the famous and especially toxic Irukandji jellyfish, can be deadly. The sea wasp, a box jellyfish found in Australian waters, can kill an adult human within a few minutes.
Most jellyfish stings are not deadly, but stings of some species of the class Cubozoa and the Box jellyfish, such as the famous and especially toxic Irukandji jellyfish, can be deadly.
Yes, the box jellyfish IS a true jellyfish.