Snails, slugs, clams, squid, octopus, cuttlefish, to name only a few.
Related Information:
The phylum Mollusca contains about 93,000, approximately 23%, of the named species with us today. Estimates of 120,000 have been made.
The majority of species live in salt water, some in fresh water, some are land animals. The phylum is usually divided into about eight living classes and two extinct classes:
Aplacophra,
Bivalvia,
Caudofoveata,
Cephalopoda,
Gastropoda,
Helcionelloida (extinct),
Monoplacophora,
Polyplacophora,
Rostroconchia (extinct),
Scaphopoda.
Mollusca
Animals with backbones belong to the phylum Chordata.
Sponges are animals of the phylum Porifera.
All Squids are animals from the Class Cephalopoda of the Phylum Mollusca. Squids are not mammals, although bear in mind that all mammals are animals too, just from a different Phylum, Phylum Chordata.
Nope, because coelenterate animals are stinging-celled animals and animals with tentacles and hollow body. Squid is not a stinging-celled animal, even if they have tentacles and hollow body. Squid is an example of a MOLLUSK, which are soft-bodied animals. ---Co0leTs24
Three types of animals that belong in the phylum Chordata are mammals (e.g., humans, dogs), birds (e.g., eagles, robins), and fish (e.g., salmon, goldfish).
Most animals in the Mollusk phylum have bilateral symmetry, where their body can be divided into two equal halves along a single plane. This symmetry allows for more efficient movement and sensory abilities.
a bug
No, a mollusk is like a clam or mussel. They are phylum mollusca. Rats are phylum chordata.
Animals with a backbone belong to the phylum Chordata. This phylum includes vertebrates such as fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals, which all possess a notochord or backbone at some stage in their development.
They belong to the phylum Chordata, animals with a spinal cord.
There are about 2,000 varieties of 'common clams'! However, they all belong to the mollusca phylum and the bivalviaclass.