Mammals
Humans are indeed members of the class Mammalia(which is a monophyletic group), however they are also member of many more clades such as Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Simiiformes, Hominiodea, and Homo just to name a few. Someone more knowledgeable than I in taxonomy could likely name dozens of clades of which man is a member.
The plural form of the word "phylum" is "phyla."
the order of the phyla are porifera,annelida Cnidaria,and Echinodermata and many more.
Fungi are currently placed into different phyla based on their from of sexual reproduction. Currently seven different phyla have been proposed including: * Chytridiomycota * Blastocladiomycota * Neocallimastiogomycota * Zygomycota * Glomeromcota * Ascomycota * Basidiomycota Reproduction modes and structures
Phyla such as Porifera (sponges) lack organs and have asymmetrical or no specific body symmetry. Another example is Placozoa, which also lack organs and have asymmetrical body shapes.
Some phyla that include simple aquatic organisms are Porifera (sponges), Cnidaria (corals, jellyfish), Nematoda (roundworms), and Platyhelminthes (flatworms). These organisms often have basic body structures and are adapted to aquatic environments.
Phylum Chordata, like humans.
Echinodermata
yes we are! Because we have a backbone.
Some common parasitic members of the phyla that infect humans include Platyhelminthes (flatworms) like tapeworms and flukes, Nematoda (roundworms) such as hookworms and pinworms, and Arthropoda (arthropods) like mosquitoes and ticks which transmit diseases.
They are not alive and there for do not have a phyla.
Animals with spinal cords (ex. humans, dogs and cats, whales, snakes, etc.).
The plural form of phylum is phyla.
Phyla is the plural of phylum. One phylum, many phyla.
The phylum with the most species that parasitize humans is Platyhelminthes, specifically the class Trematoda (flukes) and the class Cestoda (tapeworms). These parasites can cause diseases such as schistosomiasis and cysticercosis in humans.
Species: Pseudomonas aeruginosa (everywhere) Species: Paracoccus denitrificans (everywhere, extreme conditions) Genus: Agrobacterium (Plants) Genus: Bacteroids (Mammals) Species: E. coli (Mammals, natural world) Species: Streptococcus zooepidemicus. (cows) Phyla: Acidobacteria (soil) Phyla: Bacteroidetes Phyla: Firmicutes Phyla: Proteobacteria (soil) Phyla:Verrucomicrobia Phyla: Actinobacteria (ocean)
A crows phyla or phylum(plural) is the chordata. A crows phyla or phylum(plural) is the chordata.
how do phyla of vetebrates vary