Arthropoda itself is a phylum. It does have subphyla, namely, Chelicerata, Myriapoda, Crustacea, and Hexapoda. There is also an extinct class Marrellomorpha and an extinct Trilobite subphylum.
Phylum arthropoda (the arthropods) contain organisms with segmented bodies, an exoskeleton made from chitin, and joint appendages. Examples are hexapods including insects; the millipedes, crustaceans like lobsters, crabs and shrimp; the arachnids including Spiders, and many others.
Without further information, it might only be possible to say the organism would belong to these increasingly specific taxons: Metazoa; Eumetazoa; Bilateria; Protostomia; Ecdysozoa; Panarthropoda; Arthropoda. If it's safe to infer from context that the question is about a locust, you could further say it would belong to class insecta, order orthoptera, suborder caelifera, superfamily acridoidea, family acrididae.
it belongs to the class yityres might sound weird but is is true
Roundworms (Nematoda) are related to arthropods because they both molt. Crustaceans are Arthropods
The name of the phylum of arthropods is Arthropoda, which comes from the Greek meaning jointed foot, or jointed leg.
Phylum Arthropoda.
insect of course.
Yes, arthropods are organisms, like all other living things.
Yes, the lobster is an arthropod. In fact, the American lobster is currently the heaviest living arthropod (not counting extinct arthropods).
An arthropod
Insects, arachnids, crustaceans and centi/millipedes.
insects
Arthropod
The arthropod group
the fish
they belong to the arthropod phylum.
They belong to the arthropod family
yes
Arthropod
Lobsters belong to group called Crustacean.
moths belong to the phylum arthropod
No, insects belong to the phylum Arthropod.
Crab classification: Phylum - Arthropoda Subphylum - Crustacea Class - Malacostraca Order - Decapoda