A major taxconomic division to living organisms that contain one or more classes. A example is the phylem arthropoda (insect,
crustaceans, arochrinds, etc and myriapods.
A major group of animals or in some classified plants sharing one and more fundamental characteristics that set them apart from all other animals and plants and forming a primary category of the animals and plant kingdom 'phylem' arthropoda.
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phylum porifera
8... Domian Kingdom Phylem Class Order Family Genus Species
in order kingdom, Phylem, class, order, family, genus, and speices bye ya'll
As the earth worm, fan worms are in phylum Annelida.
The phylum 'Aves' contains birds. There are no birds in any other phylum, so the birds are unique to Aves. I hope you find this answer helpful!
phloem and xylem (sorry different countries spell/ call them differently.. xylem is normally the same but phloem can be phylem or any variation of the two)
The eight levels of classification are domain, kingdom, phylem, class, order, family, genus, and species. An easier way to remember it is: Dumb King Phillip came over for good spaghetti
The vascular system in a seed plant is made up of xylem, phloem, and cambium tissues. Xylem is responsible for transporting water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant, while phloem transports sugars and nutrients. Cambium is a layer of cells that is responsible for secondary growth in plants.
No, a phylum is not a living thing. In biological classification, a phylum is a rank below kingdom and above class, used to group organisms based on shared characteristics. It is a taxonomic category, not a living entity.
Sponges are animals because they are in the phylum poridfera, which is an animal phylum, they can reproduce asexualy and sexually, and when they reproduce sexually, they use sperm and eggs instead of using other stuff that plants and fungi use to reproduce. A sponge are also a consumer, that means it eats other things, they eat almost like oysters, they filter the little organisms in water through collar cells that traps the little organism, the collar cells have whiplike structures that beat back and forth, that's how they trap food. They also have pores, all sponges have pores, it's very obvious that they have pores, and i dont think plant, bacter, fungi, or protist have pore.
Vertebrates belong in the phylum Chordata, which includes animals with a notochord, a hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail at some point in their development. Vertebrates are characterized by the presence of a backbone or spinal column.
Domestic CatKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataSubphylum: VertebrataClass: MammaliaOrder: CarnivoraFamily: FelidaeGenus: Felisspecies: catus