A marine worm that live in a tube of its own secretion. These animals are filter feeders and can be found in the extreme depths of the ocean.
No it's a mollusk
An amphibian has the ability to survive in water or on land, worms and most snakes do not.
They eat bacteria
No, a tube worm is an invertebrate, whereas a true fish is a vertebrate.
Worm is a collective term. It is commonly used to describe the entire group of animals with long, tube shaped bodies that don't have any legs.
A frog is in fact an Amphibian
A NEMATOADE IS AN AMPHIBIAN its like a snake or worm but yes...it is a amphibian
defenetly not i believe they are under the phylum of analids
They are called caecilians.
A worm is not an amphibian it is from a different phylum, Annelid(ae), along with leaches and similar species.
Giant tube worm was created in 1981.
No, because a plume worm is a feather duster worm, and a giant tube worm is very deep undersea.
An amphibian has the ability to survive in water or on land, worms and most snakes do not.
No By definition an earth-worm lives in the earth. So is not an amphibian which lives in/on both earth and water.
yes the tube worm which lives in coral reefs.
Yes because a caecilian is a worm like amphibian
possibly.
it depends... if you want it to be or not ?