Craniata is a subphylum of chordates that includes animals with a skull or cranium, such as vertebrates. These animals have a head structure that encloses and protects the brain. Examples of Craniata include fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
Craniata
"Vertebrata" more accurately describes the morphological characteristic of the group, as it refers to the presence of vertebral column or backbone, which is a defining feature of vertebrates. "Craniata" focuses solely on the presence of a skull, which is not unique to vertebrates.
Urochordata, represented by tunicates; Cephalochordata, represented by lancelets; and Craniata, which includes Vertebrata.
Freshwater and saltwater fish are in the same phylum that we are, and reptiles and amphibians and birds are in; phylum chordata, subphylum craniata, subphylum vertebrata.
Keeping aside reference of other craniata, the anterior bone of the human skull is called "os frontale" or the frontal bone of the skull.
Fish have backbones and like all animals with backbones the phylum is chordata. There are further subclassifications in chordata; those with complete skulls are in the craniata subgroup.
R. Glenn Northcutt has written: 'Cranial nerves of the Coelacanth, Latimeria chalumnae (Osteichthyes, Sarcopterygii, Actinistia), and comparisons with other craniata' -- subject(s): Anatomy, Anatomy & histology, Cranial Nerves, Fishes, Physiology
There are three subphyla of Chordata: Tunicata, Cephalochordata, and Vertebrata (sometimes Craniata).
because they eat! its obvious, they eat.
it means eat eat i eat eat i owned
We don't. We eat and eat and be in pain and eat and eat and eat.....