Phylum Acanthocephala
Thorny-Headed Worms
Phylum Acoelomorpha
Acoel flatworms
Phylum Annelida
Segmented worms (earthworms, leeches, polychaetes)
Phylum Arthropoda
Arthropods (insects, spiders, crustaceans)
Phylum Brachiopoda
Lamp shells (marine, with lophophore feeding structure)
Phylum Bryozoa
Moss animals (colonial, filter-feeding)
Phylum Chaetognatha
Arrow worms (marine predators)
Phylum Chordata
Chordates (vertebrates, tunicates, lancelets)
Phylum Cnidaria
Cnidarians (jellyfish, corals, anemones, hydras)
Phylum Ctenophora
Comb jellies (marine, bioluminescent)
Phylum Cycliophora
Symbion (tiny symbionts on lobster mouths)
Phylum Echinodermata
Echinoderms (starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumbers)
Phylum Entoprocta
Goblet worms (sessile filter-feeders)
Phylum Gastrotricha
Gastrotrichs (microscopic, marine/freshwater)
Phylum Gnathostomulida
Jaw worms (marine, interstitial)
Phylum Hemichordata
Acorn worms and pterobranchs
Phylum Kinorhyncha
Mud dragons (marine, segmented)
Phylum Loricifera
Loriciferans (tiny marine, in sediment)
Phylum Micrognathozoa
Limnognathia (microscopic freshwater)
Phylum Mollusca
Mollusks (snails, clams, octopuses, squid)
Phylum Nematoda
Roundworms (many parasitic)
Phylum Nematomorpha
Horsehair worms (parasitic in insects)
Phylum Nemertea
Ribbon worms (proboscis worms)
Phylum Onychophora
Velvet worms (terrestrial, with legs)
Phylum Orthonectida
Orthonectids
Phylum Phoronida
Horseshoe worms (marine tube-dwellers)
Phylum Placozoa
Placozoans (simple flat animals, e.g., Trichoplax)
Phylum Platyhelminthes
Flatworms (planarians, tapeworms, flukes)
Phylum Porifera
Sponges
Phylum Priapulida
Priapulid worms (marine burrowers)
Phylum Rhombozoa
Rhombozoans (parasites in cephalopods)
Phylum Rotifera
Wheel animals (microscopic, with corona)
Phylum Tardigrada
Water bears (microscopic extremophiles)
Phylum Xenacoelomorpha
Xenacoelomorphs (simple bilaterians; includes acoels and xenoturbellids)

All animals are members of the Kingdom Animalia. All members of Kingdom Animalia are multicellular, and all are heterotrophs (that is, they rely directly or indirectly on other organisms for their nourishment). Most ingest food and digest it in an internal cavity.

Animal cells lack the rigid cell walls that characterize plant cells. The bodies of animals (all except sponges) are made up of cells organized into tissues, each tissue specialized to some degree to perform specific functions. In most, tissues are organized into even more specialized organs. Most animals are capable of complex and relatively rapid movement compared to plants and other organisms. Most reproduce sexually, by means of differentiated eggs and sperm. Most animals are diploid, meaning that the cells of adults contain two copies of the genetic material. The development of most animals is characterized by distinctive stages, including a zygote, formed by the product of the first few division of cells following fertilization; a blastula, which is a hollow ball of cells formed by the developing zygote; and a gastrula, which is formed when the blastula folds in on itself to form a double-walled structure with an opening to the outside, the blastopore.

Somewhere around 9 or 10 million species of animals inhabit the earth; the exact number is not known and even our estimates are very rough. Animals range in size from no more than a few cells to organisms weighing many tons, such as blue whales and giant squid. Most animals inhabit the seas, with fewer in fresh water and even fewer on land.

Questions? Comments? Suggestions? Additions?
Please contact The Virtual Zoo Staff


You are visitor count here since 21 May 2013

page design & content copyright © 2025 Andrew S. Harris

return to virtualzoo.org home

This page reprinted from http://www.virtualzoo.org. Copyright © 2025 Andrew S. Harris.

The Virtual Zoo, San Jose, CA 95125, USA