Daphnia is an animal, and is thus in the kingdom Animalia.
The scientific classification of daphnia is: Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda, Class: Branchiopoda, Order: Cladocera, Family: Daphniidae and Genus: Daphnia. The daphnia genus is divided into several species.
The scientific name for daphnia is Daphnia pulex. Daphnia are small, planktonic crustaceans commonly used in scientific research as a model organism due to their transparent bodies and ease of cultivation in the laboratory.
Daphnia is not a bacteria, it is a genus of small freshwater crustaceans belonging to the phylum Arthropoda. Bacteria are single-celled microorganisms that belong to the domain Bacteria.
Cladocera - order of small crustaceans - water fleas
The plant kingdom, Kingdom Plantae.
The scientific classification of daphnia is: Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda, Class: Branchiopoda, Order: Cladocera, Family: Daphniidae and Genus: Daphnia. The daphnia genus is divided into several species.
No, Daphnia can not eat Hydra, Because the Hydra has tentacles to capture the Daphnia and eat it. The Daphnia therefore can not get free which means the Hydra can eat the Daphnia. The Hydra therefore has more force and can eat the Daphnia. Your answer is NO.
daphnia exretes nails and sweat
The scientific name for daphnia is Daphnia pulex. Daphnia are small, planktonic crustaceans commonly used in scientific research as a model organism due to their transparent bodies and ease of cultivation in the laboratory.
Daphnia, commonly known as water fleas, are crustaceans and belong to a different branch of the animal kingdom compared to mammals like cats and dogs. While both daphnia and mammals share a common ancestor, the evolutionary divergence between them occurred much earlier. Therefore, daphnia are not as closely related to humans as cats and dogs are, which share a more recent common ancestor within the mammalian lineage.
Daphnia nivalis was created in 1977.
Daphnia occidentalis was created in 1986.
Daphnia lumholtzi was created in 1885.
Daphnia pulex was created in 1758.
Daphnia barbata was created in 1898.
Daphnia coronata was created in 1916.
Daphnia jollyi was created in 1973.