Yes, jellyfish, coral and anemones are of the Cnidarian Phylum. (aka Coelenterate ) these all have stinging cells known as nematocysts. =]
Coral and Jellyfish are classified together because share characteristic such as radically symmetrical, simple net nervous system, distinct larva stage. The classification is the phylum Cnidaria.
Animals >>>>>>>>>> Invertebrates >>>>>>>>>>> Jellyfish>>>>>>>>>>> CoralCoral comes under the kingdom Jellyfish, not starfish and sea urchins. I didn't know which one it came under but then i did some research and found out that jellyfish and coral are built in the same way so coral must be in the jellyfish kingdom.
The same phylum you belong to! Chordata.
Corals are classified as members of the phylum Cnidaria, which includes other animals such as jellyfish and sea anemones. Within the phylum Cnidaria, corals belong to the class Anthozoa. They are further divided into two subclasses: Hexacorallia (includes stony corals) and Octocorallia (includes soft corals).
Frogs and humans both belong to the phylum Chordata.
A beaver would belong to the chordata phylum, same as you and me.
Phylum (Chordata), as class is located at a lower taxonomic level than phylum for classification of organisms.
A hookworm is actually a type of roundworm, and a roundworm is in the phylum Platyhelminthes.
Phylum. Organisms in the same class belong to the same phylum, which is a higher taxonomic rank that groups organisms based on shared characteristics.
Corals (mostly plural) are animals. But very, very tiny small animals, which build out of limestone the structures, we know as a 'coral'. In deed, this sturctures are the house of thousand of these small animals, which live in this house and building it up together.
No, animals within the same class do not necessarily belong to the same phylum. Classes are a more specific classification within a phylum. Animals in different classes within the same phylum may share certain characteristics, but they can also have distinct traits that differentiate them from one another.
No, spiders and scorpions do not belong to the same phylum. Spiders belong to the phylum Arthropoda, class Arachnida, while scorpions also belong to the phylum Arthropoda but are classified in the class Scorpiones.