The term coelenterates is now out of date and has been replaced with two terms Cnidaria and Ctenophora. Animals covered by these terms are jellyfish sponges and coral like animals. So the water is where your most likely to find most of them.
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echinoderms (starfish, sea urchins), coelenterates (jellyfish), annelids (earthworms), nematodes, and other invertebrates (snails).
A Sponge is a sponge. Coelenterates include all the types of corals, hydra, jelly fish. Worms include ribbon, tape, hook, heart, ascaris, earth worms. Mollusks include clams, mussels, barnacles, oysters, octopi, squid, nudibranchs. Arthropods include crabs, lobsters, scorpions, spiders, insects.
There are two other groups Cnidaria and Ctenophora:A.) Cnidaria also known as coelenterates, diverse group of aquatic, invertebrate animals armed with microscopic stinging structures. Cnidarians make up the phylum Cnidaria, which encompasses more than 9,000 species, including corals, hydras, jellyfish, Portuguese man-of-war, and sea anemones. Cnidarians live in all oceans, and a few species inhabit fresh water.B.) Ctenophora are jellyfish-like marine animals distinguished by eight rows of cilia that propel the body in swimming. They feed on other invertebrates using two retractable sticky tentacles to capture prey. All ctenophores are hermaphroditic and reproduce sexually. Many are luminescent.
Cnidarians, which is a kind of sponge in the vast amount of different kinds of invertabrates.
importance of coelenterates
Yes, coelenterates are invertebrates.
harmful effects of coelenterates
A coelenterates habitat is in the ocean and if it is not it lives somewhere
All poriferans and coelenterates live in water, most of them in sea water, but some in fresh water. Poriferans are bottom-dwellers. Coelenterates can be free-swimming, fixed to the bottom or live in colonies fixed to the bottom, depending on species and face of life.
Coelenterates are not cold nor warm blooded
Coelenterates that are found on Cornish shores include the sea anemones, true jellyfish and hydroids.
coelenterates
Comb jellies.
Yes, Yes,
No. Coelenterates are not chordates.
Comb jellies.