WELCOME
TO
Animal Animal kingdom
Invertebrates
Protozoa
(phyla: protozoa)
Echinoderms
such as starfish
(phyla: Echinodermata)
Annelids
such as earthworms
(phyla: Annelida)
Mollusks
such as octopus
(phyla: Mollusca)
Arthropods
such as crabs, spiders and insects
(phyla: Arthropoda)
Crustaceans
such as crabs
(subphyla: Crustacea)
Arachnids
such as spiders
(subphyla: Chelicerata
class: Arachnida)
Insects
(subphyla: Uniramia
class: Insecta)
Animals
without a
Backbone or
Spinal
Column:
Vertebrates
Fish
(group: Pisces)
Amphibians
such as frogs
(class: Amphibia)
Reptiles
such as crocodiles
(class: Reptilia)
Birds
(class: Aves)
Mammals
(class: Mammalia)
Marsupials
such as kangaroos
(order: Marsupialia)
Primates
such as gorillas and chimpanzees
(order: Primates)
Rodents
such as mice
(order: Rodentia)
Cetaceans
such as whales and dolphins
( order: Cetacea)
Animals such as seals
(order: Carnivora
family: Phocidae)
Animals with a
Backbone
or Spinal Column:
All these animals
are in the phyla
Chordata and the
subphyla
Vertebrata.)
SPONGES
The simplest animals, belong to Phylum Porifera.
They live in shallow and deep oceans. The young of
sponges are motile, while adults are attached to
solid materials like rocks. The body of a hard sponge
is supported by a “skeleton” called spicules, made of
either glasslike silica or calcium carbonate. A
network of protein fibers supports soft sponges.
CNIDARIANS
Members of Phylum Cnidaria consist of animals whose tentacles
contain stinging cells called nematocysts. These poison-filled structures
are used for defense and to capture their prey or food. Once released,
this can be painful and even fatal like an attack by jellyfishes.
Corals form colonies of various colors and secrete a hard skeleton.
These accumulate to form coral reefs which are of great importance as
they are one of the 250 world’s most productive ecosystems. A coral
reef is where fishes and other marine organisms breed. At present
however, coral reefs are destroyed by pollution from oil spills and
dynamite fishing. Add to these the silt and sediments that flow down
from the mountains because of farming, mining and logging activities.
FLATWORMS
The flatworm group belongs to Phylum Platyheminthes. As
their name suggests, they are flat and ribbon-like organisms.
Flatworms are found in freshwater, in wet places and marine
waters. They include the free-living or nonparasitic worms, the
parasitic flukes, and the tapeworm group. Planaria is an
example of a free-living flatworm. It lives in moist surfaces,
under rocks in ponds, rivers and even aquariums. Flukes are
parasites that live in other animals including humans.
Tapeworms are also parasitic flatworms like flukes without a
digestive system. It can have fish, cows and pigs as hosts.
Humans can be infected with tapeworms if they eat uncooked
fish, beef or pork.
ROUNDWORMS
Roundworms are members of Phylum Nematoda. Compared to
flatworms, roundworms also known as nematodes have long,
cylindrical and slender bodies. Some roundworms are free-living
while others are parasites of animals and plants. The free-living
ones are important as they are decomposers in the soil in both
marine and freshwaters. A lot of them are found in decaying
organic matter. Parasitic roundworms can be found in moist
tissues of plants and animals. Heartworms for example can
infect dogs and cats. Humans can be infected with parasitic
roundworms such as trichina worms, hookworms and the more
common pinworms and Ascaris afflicting children.
SEGMENTED WORMS
The third group of worms among the animal phyla
belongs to Phylum Annelida. Also known as
annelids, these animals are characterized by a
segmented or repeated body parts. This makes
them move easily and with flexibility. Annelids are
mostly found crawling in moist soil or swimming in
sea and freshwaters. Examples of annelids are
earthworms, polychaetes and leeches. Most
polychaetes are marine living in tubes attached to
rocks or sand. They get floating food through the
feathery gills. Sandworms are examples of
polychaetes.
MOLLUSKS
Mollusks (Phylum Mollusca) are soft-bodied
invertebrates with most of them covered by a shell.
They have complex respiratory, reproductive,
circulatory, digestive and excretory systems
functioning together for their survival. The mollusk’s
body has three parts: a muscular foot for
locomotion, a mantle that produces the shell, and
the visceral mass that contains their internal organs.
Mollusks consist of three classes: the Gastropods,
Bivalves and Cephalopods.
ECHINODERMS
All echinoderms are found in a marine environment.
Sea lily, another echinoderm, is rooted in the sand at
the bottom of the sea, while sea cucumber burrows
in mud of deep or shallow waters.
Parts of most echinoderms radiate from the centre of
the body. They also have spines which are extensions
made of hard calcium. Under the skin, these form an
internal skeleton called the endoskeleton.
Unique to echinoderms is the presence of the water-
filled tubes that spread out to form the tube feet.
Tube feet are used for getting food, moving around
and gas exchange.
ARTHROPODS
Arthropods are grouped based on the type of exoskeleton, the
number of body sections and the kind of appendages like mouth
parts present. Appendages may be used for avoiding predators,
getting food, walking or swimming. Crustaceans form one group
of arthropods which includes water fleas, crabs, shrimps,
lobsters and barnacles. They have hard exoskeletons and have
mandible to bite and grind food. All crustaceans live in water
water with the exception of the pill bug. You see it in the soil as
the small creature that rolls into a tiny ball when disturbed.
Aquatic crustaceans have gills for breathing. Many crustaceans
are food to humans. The small ones are eaten by fishes and even
whales.

More Related Content

PPT
Kingdom animalia by louie
PPTX
Animalia kingdom modified
PPT
Kingdom animalia
PPT
Animal kingdom
PDF
The Animal Kingdom
PPTX
01 kingdom animalia
PPT
Animal kingdom
PPTX
Kingdom animalia
Kingdom animalia by louie
Animalia kingdom modified
Kingdom animalia
Animal kingdom
The Animal Kingdom
01 kingdom animalia
Animal kingdom
Kingdom animalia

What's hot (20)

PPTX
animal kingdom
DOCX
Introduction to non chordates
PPTX
Aniaml kingdom class XI
PPTX
Introduction to kingdom animalia lec(1)
PPTX
Animal Kingdom (Nonchordates)
PPT
The animal kingdom
PPTX
Kingdom Animalia
PPT
Orteza edited part 2 animal kingdom 97
PPTX
Kingdom animalia
PPTX
Animal kingdom Chordates
PPTX
BIOLOGY- ANIMAL KINGDOM-9 AND 11
PPT
Sts unit 6 classification and animal diversity for moodle
 
PPT
The animal kingdom
PPTX
Kingdom animalia
PPTX
Kingdom animalia
PDF
Classification of Animal Kingdom
PPTX
Kingdom Animalia
PPTX
Power Point Biologi Bab Kingdom Animalia
PPT
5.00 Animal phylum
animal kingdom
Introduction to non chordates
Aniaml kingdom class XI
Introduction to kingdom animalia lec(1)
Animal Kingdom (Nonchordates)
The animal kingdom
Kingdom Animalia
Orteza edited part 2 animal kingdom 97
Kingdom animalia
Animal kingdom Chordates
BIOLOGY- ANIMAL KINGDOM-9 AND 11
Sts unit 6 classification and animal diversity for moodle
 
The animal kingdom
Kingdom animalia
Kingdom animalia
Classification of Animal Kingdom
Kingdom Animalia
Power Point Biologi Bab Kingdom Animalia
5.00 Animal phylum
Ad

Viewers also liked (14)

PPT
Animal Kingdom
PPTX
The Animal Kingdom
PPTX
Animal Kingdom
PPTX
Animal kingdom
DOCX
5 animal kingdom facts
ODP
Animal kingdom 1
PPT
3 animal kingdom
PPTX
Edu290 part 1 evolution and biodiversity
PPTX
Powerpoint animal kingdom, summary
PPTX
Biodiversity and evolution
PPTX
Evolution and Biodiversity 2016
PPTX
Biodiversity and Evolution
PPT
Kingdom Animalia
PPT
PPT OF BIODIVERSITY
Animal Kingdom
The Animal Kingdom
Animal Kingdom
Animal kingdom
5 animal kingdom facts
Animal kingdom 1
3 animal kingdom
Edu290 part 1 evolution and biodiversity
Powerpoint animal kingdom, summary
Biodiversity and evolution
Evolution and Biodiversity 2016
Biodiversity and Evolution
Kingdom Animalia
PPT OF BIODIVERSITY
Ad

Similar to Animal Animal kingdom (20)

PDF
Animal atlas power point for 6th six weeks
PPTX
Science 6 Classifying Invertebrates.pptx
PPT
Animal kingdom
PPT
V. estes edu 653 animal kingdom
PPT
Animal atlas power point for 6th six weeks
PPSX
Invertebrates
PPTX
Invertebrates (Primary School) PowerPoint Presentation
PPTX
Invertebrates_Edtech101
PPT
Invertebrate animals
KEY
Animals
PPT
Kingdom-Animalia. General Biology 2 ppt ppt
PPTX
The animal kingdom
PPTX
karakteristikanimalia-150523225252-lva1-app6891(1).pptx
PDF
Invertebrates presentation
PPTX
Kingdom Animalia - Invertebrates
PPT
Invertebrates
PPTX
Invertebrats 6è A
PPTX
Animalia
Animal atlas power point for 6th six weeks
Science 6 Classifying Invertebrates.pptx
Animal kingdom
V. estes edu 653 animal kingdom
Animal atlas power point for 6th six weeks
Invertebrates
Invertebrates (Primary School) PowerPoint Presentation
Invertebrates_Edtech101
Invertebrate animals
Animals
Kingdom-Animalia. General Biology 2 ppt ppt
The animal kingdom
karakteristikanimalia-150523225252-lva1-app6891(1).pptx
Invertebrates presentation
Kingdom Animalia - Invertebrates
Invertebrates
Invertebrats 6è A
Animalia

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Nurlina - Urban Planner Portfolio (english ver)
PDF
Myanmar Dental Journal, The Journal of the Myanmar Dental Association (2013).pdf
PDF
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
PPTX
Macbeth play - analysis .pptx english lit
PDF
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY - PART - (2) THE PURPOSE OF LIFE.pdf
PDF
MICROENCAPSULATION_NDDS_BPHARMACY__SEM VII_PCI Syllabus.pdf
PDF
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY- PART (1) WHO ARE WE.pdf
PPTX
ELIAS-SEZIURE AND EPilepsy semmioan session.pptx
PDF
Civil Department's presentation Your score increases as you pick a category
PDF
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
PDF
English Textual Question & Ans (12th Class).pdf
PDF
LEARNERS WITH ADDITIONAL NEEDS ProfEd Topic
PDF
plant tissues class 6-7 mcqs chatgpt.pdf
PPTX
What’s under the hood: Parsing standardized learning content for AI
PDF
0520_Scheme_of_Work_(for_examination_from_2021).pdf
DOCX
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PDF
CRP102_SAGALASSOS_Final_Projects_2025.pdf
PDF
MA in English at Shiv Nadar University – Advanced Literature, Language & Rese...
PDF
fundamentals-of-heat-and-mass-transfer-6th-edition_incropera.pdf
PDF
Comprehensive Lecture on the Appendix.pdf
Nurlina - Urban Planner Portfolio (english ver)
Myanmar Dental Journal, The Journal of the Myanmar Dental Association (2013).pdf
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
Macbeth play - analysis .pptx english lit
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY - PART - (2) THE PURPOSE OF LIFE.pdf
MICROENCAPSULATION_NDDS_BPHARMACY__SEM VII_PCI Syllabus.pdf
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY- PART (1) WHO ARE WE.pdf
ELIAS-SEZIURE AND EPilepsy semmioan session.pptx
Civil Department's presentation Your score increases as you pick a category
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
English Textual Question & Ans (12th Class).pdf
LEARNERS WITH ADDITIONAL NEEDS ProfEd Topic
plant tissues class 6-7 mcqs chatgpt.pdf
What’s under the hood: Parsing standardized learning content for AI
0520_Scheme_of_Work_(for_examination_from_2021).pdf
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
CRP102_SAGALASSOS_Final_Projects_2025.pdf
MA in English at Shiv Nadar University – Advanced Literature, Language & Rese...
fundamentals-of-heat-and-mass-transfer-6th-edition_incropera.pdf
Comprehensive Lecture on the Appendix.pdf

Animal Animal kingdom

  • 3. Invertebrates Protozoa (phyla: protozoa) Echinoderms such as starfish (phyla: Echinodermata) Annelids such as earthworms (phyla: Annelida) Mollusks such as octopus (phyla: Mollusca) Arthropods such as crabs, spiders and insects (phyla: Arthropoda) Crustaceans such as crabs (subphyla: Crustacea) Arachnids such as spiders (subphyla: Chelicerata class: Arachnida) Insects (subphyla: Uniramia class: Insecta) Animals without a Backbone or Spinal Column:
  • 4. Vertebrates Fish (group: Pisces) Amphibians such as frogs (class: Amphibia) Reptiles such as crocodiles (class: Reptilia) Birds (class: Aves) Mammals (class: Mammalia) Marsupials such as kangaroos (order: Marsupialia) Primates such as gorillas and chimpanzees (order: Primates) Rodents such as mice (order: Rodentia) Cetaceans such as whales and dolphins ( order: Cetacea) Animals such as seals (order: Carnivora family: Phocidae) Animals with a Backbone or Spinal Column: All these animals are in the phyla Chordata and the subphyla Vertebrata.)
  • 5. SPONGES The simplest animals, belong to Phylum Porifera. They live in shallow and deep oceans. The young of sponges are motile, while adults are attached to solid materials like rocks. The body of a hard sponge is supported by a “skeleton” called spicules, made of either glasslike silica or calcium carbonate. A network of protein fibers supports soft sponges.
  • 6. CNIDARIANS Members of Phylum Cnidaria consist of animals whose tentacles contain stinging cells called nematocysts. These poison-filled structures are used for defense and to capture their prey or food. Once released, this can be painful and even fatal like an attack by jellyfishes. Corals form colonies of various colors and secrete a hard skeleton. These accumulate to form coral reefs which are of great importance as they are one of the 250 world’s most productive ecosystems. A coral reef is where fishes and other marine organisms breed. At present however, coral reefs are destroyed by pollution from oil spills and dynamite fishing. Add to these the silt and sediments that flow down from the mountains because of farming, mining and logging activities.
  • 7. FLATWORMS The flatworm group belongs to Phylum Platyheminthes. As their name suggests, they are flat and ribbon-like organisms. Flatworms are found in freshwater, in wet places and marine waters. They include the free-living or nonparasitic worms, the parasitic flukes, and the tapeworm group. Planaria is an example of a free-living flatworm. It lives in moist surfaces, under rocks in ponds, rivers and even aquariums. Flukes are parasites that live in other animals including humans. Tapeworms are also parasitic flatworms like flukes without a digestive system. It can have fish, cows and pigs as hosts. Humans can be infected with tapeworms if they eat uncooked fish, beef or pork.
  • 8. ROUNDWORMS Roundworms are members of Phylum Nematoda. Compared to flatworms, roundworms also known as nematodes have long, cylindrical and slender bodies. Some roundworms are free-living while others are parasites of animals and plants. The free-living ones are important as they are decomposers in the soil in both marine and freshwaters. A lot of them are found in decaying organic matter. Parasitic roundworms can be found in moist tissues of plants and animals. Heartworms for example can infect dogs and cats. Humans can be infected with parasitic roundworms such as trichina worms, hookworms and the more common pinworms and Ascaris afflicting children.
  • 9. SEGMENTED WORMS The third group of worms among the animal phyla belongs to Phylum Annelida. Also known as annelids, these animals are characterized by a segmented or repeated body parts. This makes them move easily and with flexibility. Annelids are mostly found crawling in moist soil or swimming in sea and freshwaters. Examples of annelids are earthworms, polychaetes and leeches. Most polychaetes are marine living in tubes attached to rocks or sand. They get floating food through the feathery gills. Sandworms are examples of polychaetes.
  • 10. MOLLUSKS Mollusks (Phylum Mollusca) are soft-bodied invertebrates with most of them covered by a shell. They have complex respiratory, reproductive, circulatory, digestive and excretory systems functioning together for their survival. The mollusk’s body has three parts: a muscular foot for locomotion, a mantle that produces the shell, and the visceral mass that contains their internal organs. Mollusks consist of three classes: the Gastropods, Bivalves and Cephalopods.
  • 11. ECHINODERMS All echinoderms are found in a marine environment. Sea lily, another echinoderm, is rooted in the sand at the bottom of the sea, while sea cucumber burrows in mud of deep or shallow waters. Parts of most echinoderms radiate from the centre of the body. They also have spines which are extensions made of hard calcium. Under the skin, these form an internal skeleton called the endoskeleton. Unique to echinoderms is the presence of the water- filled tubes that spread out to form the tube feet. Tube feet are used for getting food, moving around and gas exchange.
  • 12. ARTHROPODS Arthropods are grouped based on the type of exoskeleton, the number of body sections and the kind of appendages like mouth parts present. Appendages may be used for avoiding predators, getting food, walking or swimming. Crustaceans form one group of arthropods which includes water fleas, crabs, shrimps, lobsters and barnacles. They have hard exoskeletons and have mandible to bite and grind food. All crustaceans live in water water with the exception of the pill bug. You see it in the soil as the small creature that rolls into a tiny ball when disturbed. Aquatic crustaceans have gills for breathing. Many crustaceans are food to humans. The small ones are eaten by fishes and even whales.