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Giant pacific octopus belong to the class Cephalopoda.
There are currently four species confirmed, with six more under research. Identified in 1929, they belong to the Animalia Kingdom and the Mollusca Phylum, the Cephalopoda Class and the Octopoda Order. They are in the Octopodidae family, and the genus of Hapalochlaena. The Blue-lined octopus species is Hapalochlaena fasciata (fasciata being the species part of the binomial), the Greater blue-ringed octopus is Hapalochlaena lunulata, the Southern blue-ringed or Lesser blue-ringed octopus is Hapalochlaena maculosa, and Hapalochlaena nierstraszi doesn't seem to have a "popular" name, though it was originally identified in 1938.
The blue-ringed octopus, as well as any octopus, is in the phylum of Mollusca. All octopi are aditionally in the class Cephalopoda and the order Octopoda. The Blue-ringed octopus is additionally in the genus Hapalochlaena.
Blue ringed octopus is the common name for the genus Hapalochlaena, which contains three species:*Greater Blue-ringed octopus (Hapalochlaena lunulata)*Southern Blue-ringed octopus, also known as the Lesser Blue-ringed octopus (Hapalochlaena maculosa)*Blue-lined octopus (Hapalachlaena fasciata)Based on one description given of a single specimen in 1938, some think that there may be a fourth species, Hapolachlaena nierstraszi, but that is uncertain.
The octopus is a mollusk, a cephalopod of the order Octopoda.
Octopuses are the most intellectual marine animals. They can memorize, mimic and solve problems in labs. There have been many cases in which octopuses escaped from their tanks. To answer your question correctly, the scientific name of the common octopus is Octopus vulgaris.
Birds belong to class "aves".
Birds belong to class "aves".
Kingdom Animalia Phyllum Mollusca Class Cephalopoda Order Octopoda Family Octopodidae Genus Octopus Species vulgaris
The octopus is the class Cephalopoda of the the obvious phylum Mollusca
Birds belong to class "aves".
The scientific word for bird is "Aves."