No. Humans are chordates.
Yes, coral is a cnidarian.
On the field trip, I saw a "cnidarian"when we went on a submarine.**************************A jellyfish is a basic example of a cnidarian.
respiratory system is a cnidarian
No- they do not belong to the phylum Cnidarian. They belong to Molluska.
No cnidarian has ever been reported to have eaten a human, as the vast majority of cnidarians are too small to eat a human being. Cnidarians feed by forcing subdued prey into the stomach chamber of the polyp or medusa. Hypothetically, the only cnidarian large enough to accomplish this deed would be the Nomura's Jellyfish, Nemopilema nomurai, which is over 2 meters in diameter. However, the Nomura's jellyfish lacks stinging cells potent enough to kill or even stun humans, and the danger presented by these creatures is swamping ships with their large bodies.
A jelly fish. Cnidarian's have a sting cell called a cnidnocyte which is the defining feature.
Yes, it is a cnidarian, and is therefore an invertebrate animal. It just doesn't have the characteristics of a normal human like eyes and a nose.YEAH!
No it is not. :)
Cnidarian comes from the Greek/Turkish word "Cnidos" which means stinging nettle
no. they are cetaceans.
The sea
no :P