The phylum of chlamydia is Chlamydiae
Yes, chlamydias are obligate intracellular parasites.
No, rickettsias require an arthropod for transmission, but not chlamydias.
Rickettsias are obligate intracellular parasites that require a eukaryotic host for growth and replication. Chlamydias also depend on eukaryotic cells for propagation but have a unique developmental cycle involving an infectious elementary body and a non-infectious reticulate body. Both groups are known for causing diseases in humans.
Chlamydiae reproduce by binary fission, producing two offspring.
No, they're germs. When I first started practicing, there were brochures everywhere that said "chlamydia is not a flower." If I still had a copy, I'd send you one :)
Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata
The toucans phylum is phylum Chordata.
Phylum Aschelminthes
A phylum is a group of animals that are directly drawn from a kingdom. A sub-phylum is a phylum that is slightly more accurate for a group of animals but is not a class.
Chordata phylum
Phylum Chordata.
Phylum: Chordata Sub Phylum: Vertebrata