gametophyte generaton
Mosses are brypohytes (br-eye-yo-fights). They are plants. So the taxonomy (which is what you are asking about ) would be: Kingdom: plants, division: bryophytes, classes: takakiopsida, sphagnopsid, andreaeopsida, andreaeobryopsida, polytrichopsida, bryopsida, family: a subset of the above, genus: you can look it up, species - that is very "specific" (get it?)... You can buy sphagnum moss at most nurseries...
It has a backbone so it's included in the phylum chordata, even most people will not think that way because they live in water.
The category with the most species is the phylum. For example, there are over 1 million species in the phylum Arthropoda, which includes insects, spiders, and crustaceans.
Most sessile animals are of the phylum Mollusca.
The phylum Chordata is most closely related phylogenetically to the first vertebrates. Chordates share a number of characteristics with vertebrates, such as having a notochord, dorsal nerve cord, and pharyngeal slits. Cells within the notochord further develop into the vertebrae that define vertebrates.
Conspicuous consumption was most common in Northern cities.
Mosses are brypohytes (br-eye-yo-fights). They are plants. So the taxonomy (which is what you are asking about ) would be: Kingdom: plants, division: bryophytes, classes: takakiopsida, sphagnopsid, andreaeopsida, andreaeobryopsida, polytrichopsida, bryopsida, family: a subset of the above, genus: you can look it up, species - that is very "specific" (get it?)... You can buy sphagnum moss at most nurseries...
In the book "The Giver," one sentence where the word "conspicuous" could be used is: "Jonas's new ability to see colors made it difficult for him to hide his astonishment, making him feel conspicuous among the others who still saw the world in black and white."
northern cities
Brown Algae
the phylum Porifera
The most conspicuous parts of a mushroom are the cap and the stem. The cap is the umbrella-shaped top part of the mushroom that often varies in color and texture. The stem is the elongated structure that supports the cap and connects it to the ground.
If you used a natural sponge, you used an animal from the phylum Porifera, which is the sponge phylum.
Phylum Mollusca
1. Annelida 2. Anthropoda 3. Chordata [which is the phylum humans belong in.] 4. Cnidaria 5. Echinodermata 6. Mollusca 7. Nematoda 8. Platyhelminthes 9. Porifera
free-flatworms belong to: phylum - Platyhelminthes. class - Turbellaria.
Invertebrates have nucleated cells and are thus eukaryotes (Domain Eukarya in the Empire of Life). They are multicellular and heterotrophic and thus animalian (Kingdom Animalia). Edward O. Wilson is what one calls a 'splitter' in taxonomy and has split the animal kingdom into about 85 phyla. Most other taxonomists think there are somewhere in the thirties in the realm of 'How many phyla are there ?' Some invertebrate animal phyla are: Phylum Porifera, Phylum Cnidaria, Phylum Ctenophora, Phylum Platyhelminthes, Phylum Annelida, Phylum Mollusca, Phylum Arthropoda, Phylum Echinodermata, Phylum Hemichordata, Phylum Nematoda, Phylum Rotifera, Phylum Kinorhyncha, Phylum Nemertea, Phylum Bryozoa