A leech is also an annelidia, such as the earthworm.
Earthworms belong to the Phylum Annelida and particularly the genus Lumbricus. The Phylum is characterised by body segmentation and a body cavity called acoelom. It includes marine worms, leaches and earthworms.The Earthworm belongs to the Phylum, AnnelidaEarthworms belong to the Annelida phylum.
yes it is in the phylum annelida meaning segmented body
Well the classification of earthworms are 0399844. Also if the decimal value of this I can surely give it to you. Here it is 344532234.454433. Thankyou and I hope I haven't wasted your time.
An earthworm does not have a liver, it also does not have a gallbladder.
Scientifically, in phylum, they are called "annelids". I'm not sure what their scientific species name is...... sorry!
They are not. Why would you that they are similar? They are not even in the same phylum.
The first animal phylum to have a circulatory system was the Annelida phylum, specifically the earthworm. Annelids have a closed circulatory system composed of blood vessels that transport nutrients and oxygen throughout the body.
Phylum Annelida -- Class Oligochaeta
Earthworms are part of the Phylum Annelida.
earthworms, polychaete worms, and leeches, rag-worms
The three examples of phylum annelida are earthworm,leech and whatever............
Earthworms belong to the Phylum Annelida and particularly the genus Lumbricus. The Phylum is characterised by body segmentation and a body cavity called acoelom. It includes marine worms, leaches and earthworms.The Earthworm belongs to the Phylum, AnnelidaEarthworms belong to the Annelida phylum.
Leeches aren't arthropods (phylum Arthropoda), they belong to Annelida, the same phylum as a garden earthworm. Arthropods are characterized by segmented bodies, an exoskeleton made from chitin, and joint appendages.
Earthworm does not have the back bone. Earthworm is invertebrate animal.
Earthworm does not have the back bone. Earthworm is invertebrate animal.
squid
A cnidarian has an incomplete gut with just one opening. BTW Those who said that "How many openings does cnidaria have?" and "How many opening does an earthworm have" are the same question are idiots. An earthworm in an annelid, or a member of phylum Annelida. Cnidarians are in an entirely different and less developed phylum, that is, phylum Cnidaria. So there. STAY IN SCHOOL!