What kind of animals fall under the kingdom animalia?
Q. I cant find anything anywhere and i need help but can you tell me what kind of animals fall under animalia? Thanks so much
Asked by I'm A Fly (Top Contributor) - Tue Apr 17 23:08:52 2007 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Parent taxa Kingdom Animalia (animals) Eumetazoa (metazoans) Bilateria (bilaterally symmetrical animals) Phylum Orthonectida (orthonectids) Phylum Rhombozoa (rhombozoans) Class Dicyemida (dicyemids) Phylum Cycliophora Deuterostomia (deuterostomes) Phylum Gnathostomulida (gnathostomulids) Protostomia (protostomes) Phylum Ctenophora (comb jellies) Class Nuda Class Tentaculata Phylum Cnidaria (cnidarians) class Cubozoa (sea wasps or box jellyfish) Class Scyphozoa (cup animals and jellyfishes) Class Anthozoa (anemones and corals) Class Hydrozoa (hydralike animals, hydroids, and hydrozoans) Order Trachylina Phylum Myxozoa (ciliated protozoans) Class Microsporea Class Myxosporea … [cont.]
Answered by kittenspurr2 - Tue Apr 17 23:16:45 2007

Why is a Chameleon classified as an Animalia for it's kingdom?
Q. I really need to know by Sunday night for my science project!! So why is a Chameleon classified as an animalia?
Asked by Kells - Sat Nov 28 21:04:18 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Chameleons are multicellular (excludes Monera or Eubacteria and Archaea) with specialized tissues, meaning not all the cells perform the same function (excludes the Protista) and can't make their own foods (excludes plants). That leaves the kingdoms of Fungi and Animalia. Fungi are saprotrophic, meaning they get their nutrition from decaying organisms, which they absorb through their cell walls. And they reproduce by spores. Fungi are also sessile, meaning they're attached to a location and can't move. Chameleons don't do any of these. Chameleons capture living insects with their adhesive tongues, digest their food outside their cells, then absorb it as it's carried through their bloodstream, and reproduce sexually by the… [cont.]
Answered by Dean M. - Sun Nov 29 00:17:20 2009

What are the Food and Digestions of these mentioned Animalia Phylums?
Q. I would just like a couple sentences of the Food and Digestion of the animals of the Phylas... Porifera Cnidaria Platyhelminthes Nematoda Please and thanks.
Asked by Eric M - Thu Jun 4 17:44:15 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Go to wikipedia & type in the phylum.
Answered by Bree - Sun Jun 7 12:18:42 2009

How might the kingdom Animalia be different if cell walls were a common feature of animals?
Q. How might the kingdom Animalia be different if cell walls were a common feature of animals?
Asked by I_NEED_HELP112211 - Mon May 7 19:19:27 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Animals would be nothing like they are currently. Every animal tissue would be stiffer like the leaves of a plant. many of of organs could not functions properly so they would be completely different.
Answered by gerafalop - Tue May 8 09:48:40 2007

What did archaebacteria, eubacteria, protista, fungi, animalia, and plantae evolve from?
Q. I might be reading this wrong so if its asking me how each has evolved, then answer that.
Asked by Jake - Sun Apr 25 18:44:46 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. prokaryote
Answered by Johnny - Sun Apr 25 19:07:48 2010

How does the Monera, Protista, and Animalia kingdoms obtain nutrition?
Q. This is for a high school freshman biology class, so kinda simple. I have the Fungi and Plantae kingdom info already. (ex. Plantae: through photosynthesis)
Asked by Matt L - Mon Apr 13 21:02:13 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. There is no single answer for the Monera and Protista. Monera are the prokaryotic organisms, like bacteria. Some bacteria are photosynthetic; some are chemosynthetic, but not all. Protista (the members are no longer considered a group) are eukaryotic, mostly unicellular, aquatic organisms. Unfortunately, many of them have characteristics of BOTH plants (they have chloroplasts and can photosynthesize) and animals. Others are heterotrophic. All animals are heterotrophic - they eat other organisms.
Answered by kt - Mon Apr 13 21:10:12 2009

What animal is in the animalia kingdom and a phylum that is not in the chordata?
Q. my teacher is making me do a project on taxonomy and i have to have two animals that are in the same kingdom but different phylum and i can't find one...
Asked by *%sweet sixteen%* - Fri Feb 13 20:28:04 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Example a worm: A worm is an animal but not in the chordates. a butterfly (actually all insects) or a snail.
Answered by Zeta1 - Fri Feb 13 21:19:09 2009

Does anyone know any good websites for a taxonomic chart of kingdom animalia?
Q. I need the whole chart, but most sites i found were for one specific animal.
Asked by JLo - Sun Oct 8 15:33:47 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. try wikipedia...although i must warn you that it can be edited by anyone so it may not be as reliable
Answered by WILSON - Sun Oct 8 15:36:07 2006

What characteristics dfferentiate the kingdom Animalia from the kingdom Plantae?
Q. What characteristics dfferentiate the kingdom Animalia from the kingdom Plantae?
Asked by Koolio - Thu Oct 2 19:54:35 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Animals have several characteristics that set them apart from other living things. Animals are eukaryotic and usually multicellular , which separates them from bacteria and most protists. They are heterotrophic, generally digesting food in an internal chamber, which separates them from plants and algae. They are also distinguished from plants, algae, and fungi by lacking cell walls. All animals are motile, if only at certain life stages. In most animals, embryos pass through a blastula stage, which is a characteristic exclusive to animals. Plants are living organisms belonging to the kingdom Plantae. They include familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns, mosses, and green algae. About 350,000 species of… [cont.]
Answered by Nerderella - Mon Oct 6 12:10:37 2008

How do animals get into the Kingdom Animalia phylum's?
Q. how do animals get in the phylums? by characterisics or what?
Asked by jerseygirlx0 - Sun Jun 7 20:50:38 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Identify similarities between Eubacteria and Animalia kingdom? can someone please help me with this?
Q. The only similarity i found is that they are both kingdoms..i have been searching and searching for awhile, and nothing..someone please help :) thankyou!
Asked by tatiana h - Sun Mar 9 20:12:13 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Actually, bacteria is a domain, not a kingdom. The cell membranes of both contain esters, rather than ethers which are in archaea.
Answered by Weise Ente - Sun Mar 9 20:19:40 2008

What are the key characteristics of each branch of the Kingdom Animalia...?
Q. And if you could provide examples for each group, that would be awesome. If you can't provide characteristic that's fine, if you could just tell me what the branches are... Thanks.
Asked by pretty_tricks - Mon Mar 22 20:31:17 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. There are a lot of Phyla in the Kingdom Animalia, so I will not cover all groups, but only a few. Phylum Porifera, sea sponges, filter feed Cnidaria, jellyfish, anemone and coral, possess stinging cnidocytes Platyhelminthes, flatworms, tapeworms, flukes, no unifying characteristics Mollusca, clams, snails, octopus, chitons, muscular foot, mantle, radula (except bivalvia) Annelida, worms, segmented bodies with septa, Oligochaeta and Hirudinida possess clitella Arthopoda, crustaceans, insects, arachnids, jointed feet, chitinous shells Echinodermate, starfish, sea cucumbers, bony plates embedded in skin Chordata, mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, have a notochord in life cycle, deuterostomes, nerve cord Again this is not a complete list,… [cont.]
Answered by MH Danes - Mon Mar 22 22:18:15 2010

Kingdoms of life branch off? Is Protista at top, then Monera and Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia branch of Mo?
Q. Sorry, couldn't word it properly in my question. So, I need to glue the kingdoms as they branch off each other. My friend told me that Protista is on it's own at the top and then there's Monera, and the Animalia, Plantae, and Fungi branch off the Monera Is that right?
Asked by Hello - Thu Feb 5 22:51:20 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. No, that's totally wrong. Using the 5 kingdom system, Monera would be on a branch on its own. The Monerans, or prokaryotes, are single celled organisms whose DNA is not contained in a membrane-bound nucleus. In all of the other kingdoms cells contain a nucleus surrounded by its own membrane which holds the entire genome (all of the DNA). You could represent Monera at the bottom of the tree with all other kingdoms coming up from it, sort of like this: Here's another example: This one shows the split between Archaea and Eubacteria, but since your teacher isn't having you learn that I would just ignore it for now. Just know that modern cellular and genetic analysis tells us that all prokaryotes are not as closely related as we… [cont.]
Answered by ceddog86 - Fri Feb 6 01:16:22 2009

I have to write a tiny paragraph about Animalia?
Q. But I don't know anything about it. Someone help?
Asked by Brit x - Sun Dec 14 14:25:22 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. The kingdom Animalia, also known as Metazoa, includes all living and extinct animals known. Animals are classified as a major group of multicellular, eukaryotic organisms. Their body plan eventually becomes fixed as they develop, although some undergo a process of metamorphosis later on in their life. Most animals are motile, meaning they can move spontaneously and independently. Animals are also heterotrophs, meaning they must ingest other organisms for sustenance.
Answered by ! - Sun Dec 14 16:02:41 2008

why does the bottlenoed Dolphin belong to the kingdom animalia?
Q. Please help me with this question
Asked by jazzystar13 - Thu May 11 19:59:50 2006 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments

A. i think animalia contains all animals - fish, reptiles, mammals, birds and amphibians. dolphins are obviously not bacteria, fungi, insects, etc. if you meant mammalia it is because dolphins - breathe air with lungs, not gills breastfeed their young that do not hatch from eggs have four chambered hearts
Answered by Physics Major - Thu May 11 20:27:16 2006

Animalia-What is their cell wall made of, how do they move, and how do they reproduce? please answer!?
Q. please answer the questions about animals what thier cell wall is made of how do they move how do they reproduce thank you!
Asked by bluey - Sat Sep 8 01:11:44 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. The cell wall of animalia is not a wall, as it is a phospholipid bi-layer fluid mosaic membrane lipid with hydrophilic heads and hydrophobic tails. Two layers; heads facing out and tails facing in. The rest of your questions are easy finds on line.
Answered by jonmcn49 - Sat Sep 8 01:26:07 2007

What are 5 examples of organisms in the Archaebacteria,Eubacteria ,Protista,Fungi,Plantae,a nd Animalia Kingdom?
Q. Please include their habitats too. Thanks:D
Asked by Haylei - Tue May 11 00:15:13 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Archaebacteria-unknown live in harsh conditions Eubacteria- blue-green algae, in the ocean Protista-paramecium Fungii-Mushrooms, ground Plantae-trees Animalia-human
Answered by Paul - Tue May 11 00:39:35 2010

why do we have to learn about parazoans and all the phylogeny of kingdom animalia?
Q. why do we have to learn about parazoans and all the phylogeny of kingdom animalia?
Asked by Yell87 - Wed Jan 24 09:56:59 2007 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Do you mean protozoans? All this stuff is about the chain of life. Big things eat little things and bigger things come along and eatthe big things, until you get to the top (whale, lion,eagle). If there were no protozoans, no algae, no worms, the forms of life that feed on these things or rely on them for their byproducts such as oxygen and carbon dioxide would not be able to live. If you go into the sciences, you need a background in general biology, and an understanding of how everything is interconnected.
Answered by Nancy P - Wed Jan 24 21:08:19 2007

what are the characteristics and examples of kingdom animalia?
Q. please answer...
Asked by guzzy - Mon Feb 4 08:38:38 2008 - - 1 Answers - 2 Comments

A. Eukaryotic cells, heterotrophic, no cell wall, they contain cells with a nucleus, and membrane bound organelles, multicellular. Sponges, flatworms, roundworms, segmented worms, clams, squid, starfish, sharks, frogs, birds, turtles, lizard, rats, dogs, cats, and humans
Answered by ATP-Man - Mon Feb 4 11:04:07 2008

What are general characteristics of Kingdom Animalia?
Q. Think there is about 9
Asked by Gedsadf D - Fri Sep 19 00:03:09 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. are _chemoheterotrophs_ (ingest organic molecules) are multicellular eukaryotes lack cell wall, but have collagen, nervous and muscle tissue to support bodies are mobile at some time in life have diploid dominate life cycles undergo cellular cleavage as zygotes (blastula, gastrula, larva ) reproduce sexually **not all animals exhibity all of these, but these are the general characteristics**
Answered by t. mcgee - Fri Sep 19 00:29:54 2008

From Yahoo Answer Search: 'Animalia'
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