Annelida phylum
it is Phylum Annelida.
Annelida
There are far too many invertebrate species to list. Note that there are far more invertebrate species than vertebrate species. However, I here are a list of invertebrate phyla: Acanthocephala (a phylum of worm) Acoelomorpha (a phylum of worm) Annelida (a phylum of worm) Arthropoda (spiders, crabs, etc) Brachiopoda Bryozoa Chaetognatha (a phylum of worm) Cnidaria (corals, sea anemones, jellyfish, etc) Ctenophora (comb jellies) Cycliophora Echinodermata (sea urchins, starfish, etc) Echiura (a phylum of worm) Entoprocta (a phylum of worm) Gastrotricha Gnathostomulida (a phylum of worm) Hemichordata (a phylum of worm) Kinorhyncha Loricifera Micrognathozoa Mollusca (octopi, clams, etc) Nematoda (a phylum of worm) Nematomorpha (a phylum of worm) Nemertea (a phylum of worm) Onychophora (a phylum of worm) Orthonectida Phoronida (a phylum of worm) Placozoa Platyhelminthes (flat worms) Porifera (sponges) Priapulida Rhombozoa Rotifera Sipuncula Tardigrada (Water bears, which are microscopic animals that live in and eat moss. They look like caterpillars). Xenoturbellida (strange flatworm)
A ribbon worm falls under the phylum Nemertea.
An arrow worm is a variety of marine worm of the phylum Chaetognatha.
Sandworms belong to the phylum Annelida, which includes segmented worms with a cylindrical body shape.
Annelida
Giant tube worm was created in 1981.
As the earth worm, fan worms are in phylum Annelida.
defenetly not i believe they are under the phylum of analids
No, because a plume worm is a feather duster worm, and a giant tube worm is very deep undersea.