1. Annelida
2. Anthropoda
3. Chordata [which is the phylum humans belong in.]
4. Cnidaria
5. Echinodermata
6. Mollusca
7. Nematoda
8. Platyhelminthes
9. Porifera
There is no simple answer to this question, because botanists differ in their views of how to classify plants. It also depends on the level of detail you want to know! In addition, new discoveries may force changes in the classification system. Incidentally, botanists use the word division instead of phylum.Traditionally, plants were divided into four divisions:* Thallophyta (bacteria, algae, fungi)* Bryophyta (mosses and liverworts)* Pteridophyta (ferns and cubmosses)* Spermatophyta (seed plants: gymnosperms and angiosperms)One widely used modern system is that proposed by Whittaker in 1978 (the Five Kingdom system). In this system bacteria, algae and fungi are classified in different kingdoms to the plants, which correspond to the old bryophyta, pteridophyta and spermatophyta.[see http://home.Manhattan.edu/~Frances.cardillo/plants/intro/plantmen.HTML]This system divides extant (ie non-extinct) plants into 7 groups called divisions (botanists use the word division instead of phylum):Non-vascular plants (plants without a specialised transport [vascular] system):* Liverworts (Hepaticophyta)* Hornworts (Anthocerotophyta)* Mosses (Bryophyta)Vascular, non-seed plants:* Whisk ferns (Psilophyta)* Clubmosses (Lycophyta)* Horsetails (Sphenophyta)* Ferns (Pterophyta)Vascular, seed plants:* Conifers, cycads (Pinophyta)* Flowering plants [angiosperms] (Magnoliophyta)However, other systems divide plants in slightly different ways.See http://science.jrank.org/pages/5271/Plant-Classification-plants.HTML for an example.
If it is the 5 Kingdoms you want they are as follows:
Archaebacteria-bacteria that lives in extreme conditions such as salt lakes and hot sulphur springs
Eubacteria- most common bacteria. Some are even found on the human body and used in every day functions
Protista- Single Celled Organisms
Fungi- Mold, mushrooms, yeast, etc.
Animal- Always multicellular
The best known animal phyla are the Mollusca, Porifera, Cnidaria, Platyhelminthes, Nematoda, Annelida, Arthropoda, Echinodermata, and Chordata, the phylum to which humans belong. Although there are approximately 35 phyla, these nine include over 96% of animal species. Many phyla are exclusively marine, and only one phylum, the Onychophora (velvet worms) is entirely absent from the world's oceans-although ancestral oncyophorans were marine.
Acanthocephala, Annelida, Arthropoda, Aschelminthes, Brachiopoda, Bryozoa, Cephalochordata, Chaetognatha, Chordata, Cnidaria, Coelenterata, Craniata, Cryptophyta, Ctenophora, Cycliophora, division, Echinodermata, Ectoprocta, Endoprocta, Entoprocta, Mollusca, Nematoda, Nemertea, Nemertina, Pentastomida, Phoronida, Phoronidea, phylum Acanthocephala, phylum Annelida, phylum Arthropoda, phylum Aschelminthes, phylum Brachiopoda, phylum Bryozoa, phylum Chaetognatha, phylum Chordata, phylum Cnidaria, phylum Coelenterata, phylum Cryptophyta, phylum Ctenophora, phylum Cycliophora, phylum Echinodermata, phylum Ectoprocta, phylum Entoprocta, phylum Mollusca, phylum Nematoda, phylum Nemertea, phylum Nemertina, phylum Phoronida, phylum Platyhelminthes, phylum Pogonophora, phylum Porifera, phylum Protozoa, phylum Pyrrophyta, phylum Rotifera, phylum Sipuncula, Platyhelminthes, Pogonophora, polyzoa, Porifera, Protozoa, Pyrrophyta, Rotifera, Sipuncula, subphylum Cephalochordata, subphylum Craniata, subphylum Pentastomida,, subphylum Tunicata, subphylum Urochorda, subphylum Urochordata, subphylum Vertebrata, Tunicata, Urochorda, Urochordata, Vertebrata.
I belive its got something to do with the kingdoms
cnideria, echinodermata,protozoans, annelida, coelentrata
No. Or, rather, the question doesn't make any sense. A nucleus in the biological sense is a part of a (or at least some kinds of) cell, a phylum is a (very large) group of (potentially distantly) related kinds of organisms. It's kind of like asking if a nation has a liver.
all organisms in the deuteromycota phylum are different which is why this phylum is known as the imperfect fungi group. the only characteristic that the fungi in the phylum have in common is they all have cell walls.
The different criteria for classifying animals are as follows: Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species.
several different classes make up a phylum.
the different kinds of elimination is a single elimination and a double elimination
It is the phylum of kinds of worms known as the roundworms.
Annelid is just the Phylum. There are actually 17,000 different species in this one phylum! Three different worms could be: The Tape Worm, The Segmented Worm, and the Christmas Tree Worm.
Kingdom: Animalia (obviously!), Phylum: chordata, Class: mammalia, Order: Artiodactyla, Family: Suidae, Genus: Sus, Species: different kinds for different kinds of piggies! P.S. If you go on wikipedia and type in any animal, it shows a complete chart of the order, class, kingdom, ect. that it is in. Aint that wonerful!! :D
Way different...Annilids are a phylum of the lophotrochozoa and nematodes are a phylum of ecdysozoa...
Generally a Phylum or sub-phylum, however could be different in rare cases. Example Phylum Chordata, Sub-phylum vertebrata.
Yes. Different kinds of salt can make different kinds of crystals
I think that different classes of barnacles belong in different Phylum but I did find this - hopes it helps it only off wikipediaKingdom:AnimaliaPhylum:ArthropodaSubphylum:CrustaceaClass:MaxillopodaSubclass:ThecostracaInfraclass:Cirripedia
youir mom
There are different formulae for calculating different kinds of energy.There are different formulae for calculating different kinds of energy.There are different formulae for calculating different kinds of energy.There are different formulae for calculating different kinds of energy.
The four different kinds of fungi are:-ZygomycetesAscomycetesBasidiomycetesDeutereomycetesThe different kinds of fungi are:- ZygomycetesAscomycetesBasidiomycetesDeuteromycetes.
The phylum that includes segmented worms is known as Annelida. These phylum is believed to have over 17,000 species of different organisms.
what are the different kinds of writting