Animal Kingdom

Author: Laura McKinney
Date Of Creation: 8 August 2021
Update Date: 7 May 2024
Anonim
Animal Kingdom 4K - Scenic Wildlife Film With Calming Music
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Content

To study nature, a series of taxonomic categories are used that divide living beings in groups. Each of these categories groups beings that have some characteristics in common.

A traditional series of taxonomic categories is the following (from the most general to the most particular):

Domain - Kingdom - Phylum or division - Class - Order - Family - Genus - Species

In other words, the kingdoms are very extensive subdivisions.

What are the Kingdoms?

  • Animalia: Beings with movement capacity, without chloroplast or cell wall, with embryonic development. They are eukaryotic organisms.
  • Plantae: Photosynthetic living beings, without the ability to move, with cell walls composed largely of cellulose. They are eukaryotic organisms.
  • Fungi: Beings with cell walls made up largely of chitin. They are eukaryotic organisms.
  • Protista: All eukaryotic organisms that do not meet the characteristics that would allow them to be classified within the three previous kingdoms. Eukaryotic cells are those that have the nucleus differentiated from the rest of the cell.
  • Monera: Prokaryotic beings, that is, those whose cells do not have a differentiated nucleus.

See also: 50 Examples from Each Kingdom


Characteristics of the Animal Kingdom

The animal kingdom (Animalia) groups together a wide variety of organisms that meet various characteristics:

  • Eukaryotic cells: The nucleus of these cells is separated from the cytoplasm by a cell membrane. In other words, the genetic information is separated from the cytoplasm.
  • Heterotrophs: They feed on organic matter that comes from other living beings.
  • Multicellular: Are those that are made up of two or more cells. All animals are made up of millions of cells.
  • Tissue: In animals, cells form organized structures called tissues. In them, the cells are all equal and regularly distributed. Their physiological behavior is coordinated. The cells of a tissue share the same embryonic origin.
  • Movement capacity: Unlike other living beings (such as plants or fungi), animals have anatomical structures in their bodies that allow them to move.
  • Cell walls without chloroplast: It is the substance that allows plants to carry out photosynthesis. Since animals do not have chloroplast, they must feed on other living things (heterotrophs)
  • Embryonic development: From a single zygote (cell resulting from the union of a male gamete and a female gamete), embryonic development begins cell multiplication until the entire organism is formed, with its multiplicity of differentiated cells, tissues, organs and systems.

See also:


  • What are Autotrophic and Heterotrophic Organisms?

Examples of Animal Kingdom

  1. Human being (Homo Sapiens): Phylum: chordate. Subphylum. Vertebrate. Class: mammal. Order: Primate.
  2. Ant (Formicidae): Phylum: arthropod. Subphylum: Hexapod. Class: insect. Order: hymenoptera.
  3. Eoperipatus totoro: phylum: velvety worm. Class: udeonychopohora. Order: Euonychophora. Peripatidae family.
  4. Bee (anthophila). Phylum: arthropod. Class: insect. Order: hymenoptera.
  5. Domestic cat (felis silvestris catus). Edge: cordate. Subphylum: vertebrate. Class: mammal. Order: carnivore. Family. Feline.
  6. Elephant (elephantidae): Phylum: chordate. Subphylum: vertebrate. Class: Mammal. Order: proboscidean.
  7. Crocodile (crocodylidae): Phylum: chordate. Class: Sauropsido. Order: Crocodilia.
  8. Butterfly (lepidoptera): phylum: arthropod. Class: insect. Order: Lepidoptera.
  9. Yellow clam (mactroid yellowdesma). Phylum: mollusk. Class: bivalve. Order: veneroid.
  10. Salmon (psalm): Phylum: chordate. Subphylum: verbrate. Order: salmoniformes.
  11. Oceanic dolphin (delphinidae). Edge: cordate. Class. Mammal. Order: cetacean.
  12. Ostrich (struthio camelus). Edge: cordate. Class: ave. Order: struthioniforme.
  13. Penguin: Edge: cordate. Class: Ave. Order: sphenisciforme.
  14. Boa: edge: Cordate. Class: sauropsid. Order: squamata.
  15. Bat (chiropter): edge: cordate. Class: mammal. Order: chiroptera.
  16. Earthworm (lumbrícido): phylum: annelid. Class: clitellata. Order: haplotaxida.

It can serve you:


  • 100 Examples of Vertebrate Animals
  • 50 Examples of Invertebrate Animals
  • What are Viviparous Animals?
  • Examples of Oviparous Animals

Animal Kingdom Subdivision

The animal kingdom in turn is divided into large groups called phyla:

  • Acanthocephala (Acanthocephalus): parasitic worms (they obtain food from other living animals). They have a "head" with thorns.
  • Acoelomorpha (Acelomorphs): cellophane worms (solid, without cavities) that do not have a digestive tract.
  • Annelida (Annelids): coelominated worms (with cavities) that have the body segmented into rings.
  • Arthropoda (arthropods): have a chitin exoskeleton (carapace or similar structure) and jointed legs
  • Brachiopoda (Brachiopods): They have a loptophore, which is a rounded organ with tentacles that surrounds the mouth. They also have a shell with two valves.
  • Bryozoa (Bryozoans): have lophophorous and anus outside the tentacular crown.
  • Chordata (Chordate): they have a cord or dorsal column, also called the notochord. They can lose it after embryonic stage.
  • Cnidaria (Cnidarians): diblastic animals (they complete embryonic development without mesoderm) that have cnidoblasts (cells that secrete defense substances)
  • Ctenophora (Ctenophores) diblastic animals with coloblasts (cells to trap food)
  • Cycliophora (Cyclophores): pseudocoelomed animals (animals with a general cavity of non-mesodermal origin) with a circular mouth surrounded by cilia (thin, hair-like appendages)
  • Echinodermata (Echinoderms): “skin with spines” animals. They have pentarradiate symmetry (central symmetry) and an external skeleton made up of calcareous pieces.
  • Echiura (Equiuroideos): marine worms with proboscis and "thorn tail"
  • Entoprocta (entoproctos): lophophores with anus included in the tentacular crown (inner anus)
  • Gastrotrichia (gastrotricos): pseudocoelomed animals, with spikes and two adhesive caudal tubes.
  • Gnathostomulida (gnathostomulids): animals with characteristic jaws that distinguish them from other animals.
  • Hemchordata (Hemichordates): deuterostomous animals (animals that in their embryonic state develop the anus before the mouth), with pharyngeal slits and stomocord (a kind of spinal column where the weight of the body is supported).
  • Kinorhyncha (quinorhincs): pseudocoelomated animals with retractable head and segmented body.
  • Loricifera (Lorociferous): pseudocoelomed animals covered with a protective layer.
  • Micrognathozoa (micrognatozoa): pseudocoelomates with complex jaws and an extendable thorax.
  • Mollusca (molluscs): soft-bodied animals, mouth with radula and covered by a shell.
  • Myxozoa (myxozoa) microscopic parasites. They have polar capsules that secrete defense substances.
  • Nematoda (nematodes): pseudocoelomated worms that have a chitin cuticle.
  • Nematomorpha (nematomorphs) parasitic worms similar to nematodes
  • Nemerte (Nemerteans): cellophane worms (no cavity, solid body) with extendable proboscis.
  • Onychophora (velvety worms): worms with legs that end in chitin nails.
  • Orthonectide (orthonrectidae): parasites with cilia (hair-like appendages)
  • Phoronida (phoronids): tube-shaped worms and U-shaped intestine.
  • Placozoa (placozoans): crawling animals
  • Platyhelminthes (flatworms): worms with cilia, without anus. Many of them are parasites.
  • Pogonophora (pogonophos): tube-shaped animals with a retractable head.
  • Porifera (sponges): parazoans (animals without muscles, nerves or internal organs), with inhalant pores in the body, without defined symmetry.
  • Priapulida (priapulids): pseudocoelomate worms with an extendable proboscis surrounded by papillae.
  • Rhombozoa (rhombozoa): parasites made up of few cells.
  • Rotifera (rotifers): pseudocoelomates with a crown of cilia.
  • Sipuncula (sipunculid) coelominated worms with mouths surrounded by tentacles.
  • Tardigrada (water bears): segmented trunk, with eight clawed legs or suction cups.
  • Xenacoelomorpha (xenoturbellids): deuterostomous worms with cilia.


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