Earthworms belong to the Phylum Annelida and particularly the genus Lumbricus. The Phylum is characterised by body segmentation and a body cavity called acoelom. It includes marine worms, leaches and earthworms.
The Earthworm belongs to the Phylum, Annelida
Earthworms belong to the Annelida phylum.
AnimalAns#2:
Earthworm belongs to:
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Annelida
Class:Clitellata
Order:Haplotaxida
Suborder:Lumbricina
Earthworm belongs to:
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Annelida
Class:Clitellata
Order:Haplotaxida
Suborder:Lumbricina
The earthworm belongs to the insect group. But an earthworm is a invertebrate.
invertabrae
The Lumbricidae is a family of earthworms which includes most of the earthworm species well-known to Europeans.
Earthworms belong to Class Oligochaeta, which belongs to Phylum Annelida
Kingdom Animalia,Phylum Anelidae,Class Olegocheta
earthworms fall into the category of "invertebrates.
They belong to the protist kingdom.
Earthworms are big segmented worms that belong to the Phylum Annelida, Class Clitellata, and sub class Oligochaeta. Leeches are also worms belonging to the same Phylum and class, but sub class Hirudinae and are of three types, freshwater, terrestrial and marine.
The annelids are segmented worms. Although some annelids have appendages and primitive sight organs (photo-reactive pigment spots), earthworms do not. Earthworms do, however, have the typical annelid neural ganglia, and the annelid circulatory system, including the aortic arches that function as the worm's heart. And, of course, earthworms are segmented.
There are many, many species of earthworm. The Common Earthworm, which is the species I think most are used to seeing belongs to the species Lumbricus terrestris.
Earthworms belong are Annelids which belong to the Kingdom Animalia so technically they are animals. Insects are also animals (Animalia). But no, earthworms are not insects.
>Kingdom: Animalia>Subkingdom: Eumetazoa>Phylum: Nematoda>Classes: Chromadorea, Secernetea, Enoplea>Orders: search online for "Nematode orders".
Yes, they belong to Kingdom Animalia which states: All living things that cannot make their own food are an animal.
The bottom.
Kingdom animalia Phylum Annelida
earthworms fall into the category of "invertebrates.
Virus's do not belong to a Kingdom.
they belong to the plantae kingdom
They belong to the protist kingdom.
THey belong to the kingdom Cestoda
A lily belongs to the Plantae kingdom. This kingdom includes all plants, which are multicellular, have cell walls, and are capable of photosynthesis.
The oak belongs to the Plantae kingdom, along with all other plants.