They are in phyla Annelida. Phyla Annelida consits of leeches, earth worms, and bristle worms.
flat worms,segmented worms, and round worms.
Yes. Worms have an intestinal tract and an anus.
It depends what type of warm you are referring to. Flatworms belong Platyhelminthes Tubeworms belong to Nematodes and Segmented worms belong to Annelids Centipedes and Millipedes are not worms. They belong to the Arthropod Phylum.
The phyla classified in Deuterostomia are Echinodermata and Chordata. These phyla exhibit a unique pattern of embryonic development where the blastopore becomes the anus, and radial cleavage occurs during cell division.
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The man kinds of plylas' are flatworms, roundworms, and segmented worms.
There are more than two phyla in the animal kingdom... There are many phyla in the animal kingdom. There are a few phyla of worms and other invertebrates and then you have the vertebrate ohyla. Unless that's what your asking? Did you want the invertebrate and vertebrate in general phyla? That's the only set of 2 things I can think of.
There are between 10 and 20 phyla that are considered 'worms' It is such a general word...Need way more specificity, like flat worm, flukes, round worms, ribbon worms, horsehair worms...etc....
You are correct, there are only three worm phyla. So the key to the question was that your worm is segmented. All segmented worms belong to Phylum Annelida.
There are five main phyla in the animal kingdom: Porifera (sponges), Cnidaria (jellyfish, corals), Platyhelminthes (flatworms), Annelida (segmented worms), and Arthropoda (insects, spiders).
There are many Phyla in Animalia, there are quite a few small phyla that many scientists argue over how to classify. So the larger Phyla are: Porifera - Sponges Cnidaria - Jellyfish, Corals Ctenophora - Comb Jellies Platyhelminthes - Flatworms - Tapeworms Nematoda - Round worms - Hookworms Nemertea - Ribbon Worms Acanthocephala - Spike headed worms Bryozoa - Mossy corals Tardigrada - Water Bears Brachiopoda - Primtive Bivalves Mollusca - Clams Mussles Annelida - Segmented worms - Earth worms Sipuncula - Peanut Worms Arthropoda - insects - millipedes - centipedes - spiders - crabs Chaetognatha - Arrow Worms Echinodermata - Sea Stars- Urchins - Sea Cucumbers Hemichordata- Acorn Worms Chordata - Reptiles Fish Birds Mammals Some of the smaller and debated ones include: Placazoa Kinorhyncha - Mud Dragons Priapulida Loricifera Nematomorpha - Horsehair worms Onychophora - Velvet worms Gastrotricha Rotifera - Rotifers Cycliophora Phoronida - Horseshoe worms Pterobranchia There are more or less depending on what book or site you check out, or what scientist you talk to.