No. They are in the same kingdom, though. In the Linnaean classification system, the highest level is domain, and inside that are the three domains archaea, bacteria, and eukaryotes. Animals are in eukaryotes. Then inside that are the kingdoms protista, fungi, plantae, and animalia. Can you guess which one animals are in? No, not fungi. Animalia 😄! The next level is phylum, and there are many phyla in the kingdom animalia. Just so you know, all the classification levels are (along with a fun mnemonic): Domain u m b Kingdom i d s Phylum o o p Class o n s t a n t l y Family o r Genus o o d Species u n Very good question. I enjoyed answering it. YOUR QUESTION WAS ANSWERED BY: ✨The One Who Knows All✨
Invertebrates are not in same phyllum but in different phylla .
All phyla contain invertebrates. The only one that contains vertebrates is the phylum Chordata, but it also contains some invertebrates.
YES!
Same kingdom as humans. Invertebrates phylum of Echinoderms, specific Asteroidea.
worms are invertebrates and are annelids
No. They have a skeletal system and a backbone.
Sea stars are in the phylum Echinodermata and the subphylum Asterozoa.
arthropoda
Arthropoda
arthropoda
sponges
All phyla except for one (Chordata) include only invertebrates, so 8 phyla include only invertebrates. The phylum Chordata is made up of the subphylum Vertebrata so therefore Chordata also has some species in it that are invertebrates. Humans are included in the phylum Chordata as well as the subphylum Vertebrata.