Protozoa — 'unicellular' eukaryotes, may be referred to as
protists, protozoans, unicellulates etc; often now included in a separate
kingdom together with fungal protists and algae — as the Protista or
Protoctista — a grouping of problematical and multiple lineage; many
groups have representatives traditionally studied by both algologists and
zoologists, leading to much confusion in terminology and classification;
the scheme followed here takes a zoological viewpoint
- Sarcomastigophora
- Mastigophora
mastigophorans, flagellates
- Phytomastigophorea
phytoflagellates, groups include representatives which have
chloroplasts and are photosynthetic
- Chloromonadida
chloromonads, chlorophytes (Heterosigma)
- Chrysomonadida
chrysomonads, chrysophytes, yellow-green algae (Mallomonas,
Ochromonas)
- Cryptomonadida
cryptomonads, cryptophytes, found all over the world —
both free living in moist places and parasitic in
animals (Cryptomonas, Rhodomonas)
- Dinoflagellida
dinocysts, dinoflagellates, dinomastigotes, dinophytes, mostly marine planktonic but
some freshwater representatives, may form 'red tides' (Gonyaulax),
be luminescent (Noctiluca), form symbiotic
relationships with coelenterates (Gymnodinium),
and others (Peridinium)
- Euglenida
euglenoid flagellates, euglenophyta, mostly inhabit
freshwater enriched with organic matter (Euglena),
some marine or brackish, a few are parasitic in animals
- Prymnesiida
prymnesiophytes, haptophytes, golden motile algae viewed
by marine biologists as calcareous nannoplankton
plankton and by palaeontologists as coccolithophorids (Coccolithus,
Prymnesium)
- Silicoflagellida
silicoflagellates (Dictyocha)
- Volvocida
(Chlamydomonas,
Chloromonas, Dunaliella, Volvox)
- Zoomastigophorea
zooflagellates
- Choanoflagellida
choanoflagellates, collar-flagellates, may be solitary (Salpingoeca)
or colonial (Proterospongia), colonial
choanoflagellates resemble sponges and it is thought
that they might represent what an ancestor of all
metazoans might have been like [ucmp]
- Diplomonadida
some freeliving in freshwater but most commensal or
parasitic in intestines of animals (Giardia, Hexamita)
- Hypermastigida
- Kinetoplastida
include the freeliving bodonids and parasitic
trypanosomes (Leishmania, Trypanosoma)
- Oxymonadida
- Proteromonadida
(Proteromonas)
- Trichomonadida
(Trichomonas, Tritrichomonas)
- Opalinata
(Opalina)
- Sarcodina
made up of superclasses Rhizopoda (amastigote amoebae and
thecamoebae) and the Actinopoda which includes the radiolarian
groups
- Lobosea
- Gymnamoebia
(Gymnamoeba)
- Amoebida
(Acanthamoeba, Amoeba, Entamoeba)
- Pelobiontida
karyoblasteans,freeliving amoeboid protists completely
lacking mitochondria (Pelomyxa)
- Schizopyrenida
sometimes called amoeboflagellates, common in soils,
some are pathogenic in man(Naegleria)
- Testacealobosia
- Arcellinida
(Arcella, Difflugia)
- Himatismenida
- Tichosida
- Acarpomyxea
(Leptomyxa)
- Acrasea
cellular slime moulds (Acrasis)
- Eumycetozoea
includes cellular slime moulds, the prosteliids (Ceratiomyxa)
and dictyosteliids (Dictyostelium,
Polysphondylium), together with acellular, plasmodial or
true slime moulds — myxogastrids, myxomycota, myxomycetes
(Physarum)
- Plasmodiophorea
mostly obligate parasites of plants (Plasmodiophora,
Spongospora)
- Filosea
includes aconchulinids and gromiids (Euglypha)
- Granuloreticulosia
includes Foraminifera
(Ammonia, Anomalina, Globigerina, Globorotalia, Trochammina)
- Xenophyophorea
(Psammina)
- Acantharea
radiolarian group
- Polycystinea
radiolarian group
- Phaeodarea
radiolarian group
- Heliozoea
primarily freshwater (Acanthocystis, Dimorpha,
Raphidocystis)
- Labyrinthomorpha
labyrinthulids, slime nets, form transparent colonies of individual
cells (Labyrinthula)
- Apicomplexa
named for 'apical complex' a distinctive arrangement of organelles at
one end of the cell, all are spore forming parasites of animals and
include the haematozoan parasites of vertebrate blood [ucmp ToL]
- Perkinsea
(Perkinsus)
- Sporozoea
- Gregarinia
gregarines (Gregarina, Nematopsis)
- Coccidia
coccidians, malarial parasites (Cryptosporidium, Eimeria,
Hepatozoon, Isospora, Plasmodium, Toxoplasma)
- Piroplasmia
piroplasmids (Babesia, Theileria)
- Microspora
mostly intracellular parasites of vertebrates (Glugea,
Microsporidium, Nosema)
- Ascetospora
(=Haplospora) includes the spore forming parasites Haplosporidia
(Haplosporidium, Urosporidium) and Paramyxea
- Myxozoa
(=Cnidospora) traditionally considered protistan parasites but recent
molecular evidence supports an origin with parasitic cnidarians [ToL]
- Myxosporea
myxosporidians, parasites of vertebrates and often disease
causing in fish (Ceratomyxa, Henneguya, Kudea, Myxidium,
Myxobolus)
- Actinosporea
actinomyxids, parasites of invertebrates
- Ciliophora
ciliates, infusorians, characterized by having cilia [ucmp]
- Kinetofragminophorea
- Gymnostomatia
includes Katyorelictida (Loxodes) and Prostomatida (Didinium)
- Vestibulifera
includes Colpodida (Colpoda), Entodiniomorpha (Entodinium,
Polyplastron) and Trichostomatida (Balantidium,
Dasytricha)
- Hypostomatia
includes Apostomatida, Cyrtophorida and Nassulida
- Suctoria
(Trichophrya)
- Oligohymenophorea
- Hymenostomatida
includes Astomatida, Hymenostomatida (Colpidium,
Paramecium, Tetrahymena) and Scuticociliatida (Uronema)
- Hysterocinetia
- Peritrichia
peritrichs (Ophrydium, Trichodina, Vorticella)
- Polyhymenophorea
- Spirotrichia
includes Heterotrichida (Bursaria, Metopus, Stentor),
Hypotrichida (Euplotes, Oxytricha), Oligotrichida (Strombidium,
tintinnids)
- Hemimastigophora
Metazoa
— multicellular mitochondrial eukaryotes (together with plants, fungi
and some protists sometimes referred to as Crown Eukaryotes)
- Invertebrates
'animals without backbones'; here taken to include all non-chordate
metazoans:-
- Porifera
poriferans, sponges, characterized by pores in their outside walls
through which water is drawn
- Calcarea
calcareous sponges with spicules of calcium carbonate (Clathrina)
- Demospongiae
have a skeletal network of spongin fibers and/or siliceous
spicules, includes all known freshwater sponges (Ephydatia,
Haliclona, Spongilla)
- Hexactinellida
glass sponges with siliceous spicules (Hexactinella, Rossella)
- Sclerospongiae
a polyphyletic grouping
- Stromatoporoidea
fossil group with massive calcareous skeletons (Stromatoporella)
- Coelenterata
(=Cnidaria) coelenterates, mainly marine phylum characterized by cnida
or nematocysts used in feeding; characteristic body forms are the
polyp (generally sedentary) and the medusa (generally motile)
- Anthozoa
includes most corals & sea anemones, coelenterates whose
living representatives lack a medusoid 'jellyfish' stage in
their life cycle
- Ceriantipatharia
black corals, thorny corals (Antipathes, Cerianthus)
- Octocorallia
(=Alcyonaria) alcyonarians, soft corals, sea
pens (Alcyonium, Renilla)
- Zoantharia
(=Hexacorallia) corals and sea anemones
- Actiniaria
sea anemones (Actinia, Metridium)
- Rugosa
fossil rugose corals, tetracorals (Acanthophyllum,
Stylostrotion)
- Scleractinia
(=Madreporaria) hard corals, stony corals, true corals (Acropora,
Fungia, Montastraea, Porites)
- Tabulata
tabulate corals, fossil (Alveolites, Heliolites)
- Zoanthiniaria
(=Zoanthidea) (Palythoa, Zoanthus)
- Cubozoa
box jellyfish (Carybdea)
- Hydrozoa
(=Hydromedusae) mostly alternate between polyp and medusa stage,
many are colonial
- Hydroida
freshwater hydras & colonial hydroids (Hydra,
Hydractinia, Obelia, Plumularia, Tubularia)
- Milleporina
(=Milleporida) hydrocorals, millepores (Millepora)
- Siphonophorida
(=Siphonophora) colonial jellyfish (Physalia)
- Scyphozoa
true jellyfish (Aurelia, Chrysaora, Rhopilema)
- Ctenophora
comb jellies, ctenophores, jelly like motile marine organisms with
rows of beating cilia or comb plates (Beroe, Mnemiopsis,
Pleurobrachia)
- Echinodermata
echinoderms, marine deuterostome organisms characterized by tube feet
which form part of the water vascular system, thought to possibly have
a common ancestry with the chordates
- Crinoidea
featherstars, sea lilies (Barycrinus, Metacrinus)
- Echinoidea
heart urchins, sand dollars, sea urchins (Clypeaster,
Echinus, Echinocardium, Hemicentrotus, Lytechinus, Paracentrotus,
Strongylocentrotus)
- Holothuroidea
sea cucumbers (Cucumaria, Holothuria, Stichopus)
- Stelleroidea
- Asteroidea
sea stars, starfish (Acanthaster, Asterias, Pisaster)
- Ophiuroidea
brittle stars (Amphiura, Ophiura)
- Platyhelminthes
flat worms, acoelomate animals of uncertain origin
- Cestoda
tapeworms (Diphyllobothrium, Echinococcus, Hymenolepis,
Taenia)
- Trematoda
parasitic flukes (Cercaria, Diplostomum, Fasciola,
Gyrodactylus, Schistosoma)
- Turbellaria
turbellarians, free living flatworms (Dugesia, Temnocephala)
- Nematoda
nematodes, roundworms, threadworms(some), whipworms, lungworms,
hookworms, eelworms; a pseudocoelomate phylum with both parasitic and
free-living representatives, exist in very large numbers (Ascaris,
Caenorhabditis C. elegans, Haemonchus, Heterorhabditis, Meloidogyne,
Onchocerca, Toxocara)
- Acanthocephala
acanthocephalans, spiny headed worms; a parasitic pseudocoelomate
phylum with spiny protrusible proboscis (Acanthocephalus,
Corynosoma, Moniliformis)
- Mesozoa
mesozoans, small worm like organisms at one time though to be
degenerate flatworms (Rhopalura)
- Nematomorpha
nematomorphans, horsehair worms, threadworms (some), gordian worms; a
pseudocoelomate phylum (Gordius)
- Nemertinea
(=Rhynchocoela, Nemertea) nemertines, proboscis worms, rhynchocoels,
ribbon worms, acoelomate worms with extensible proboscis (Cerebratulus,
Lineus)
- Annelida annelids,
segmented coelomate worms with chitinous bristles
- Hirudinea
leeches (Helobdella, Hirudo, Notostomum)
- Oligochaeta
earthworms, terrestrial bristle worms (Dendrobaena, Eisenia,
Lumbricus, Tubifex)
- Polychaeta
lugworms, paddleworms, polychaetes, ragworms, sandworms, include
parasitic Myzostomida but otherwise mostly marine (Arenicola,
Cirratulus, Glycera, Lanice, Nereis, Polydora, Serpula)
- Rotifera
(=Rotatoria) rotifers,'wheel animals' named for rotating ring of
cilia; a pseudocoelomate phylum (Asplanchna, Brachionus, Lecane)
- Cephalorhyncha
cephalorhynchans
- Chaetognatha
chaetognaths, arrow worms, small marine arrow shaped organisms with
moveable hooks (Sagitta)
- Cycliophora
a new phylum only discovered in 1995 with a single species (Symbion
pandora)
- Echiura
echiurans, spoon worms, marine worms with extensible proboscis which
live in u-shaped tubes (Echiurus, Urechis)
- Gastrotricha
gastrotrichs, free-living wormlike organisms with lobed heads; a
pseudocoelomate phylum (Chaetonotus, Macrodasys, Xenotrichula)
- Gnathostomulida
gnathostomulids, jaw worms; a pseudocoelomate phylum (Gnathostomula)
- Kinorhyncha
kinorhynchs, free-living marine, with spiny heads used in
characteristic locomotion after which they are named; a
pseudocoelomate phylum (Echinoderes)
- Lobopodia
- Loricifera
loricifers; a pseudocoelomate phylum first described in 1983 with
spiny heads and abdominal plates called lorica (Nanaloricus)
- Placozoa
a parazoan group represented by the single species (Trichoplax
adhaerens)
- Pogonophora
pogonophorans, beard worms, deep-sea sessile worms of uncertain
lineage which produce upright tubes to live in (Siboglinum)
- Priapulida
(=Priapula) priapulids; a pseudocoelomate protostomate phylum, short
fat marine worms about which relatively little is known (Priapulus)
- Sipuncula
sipunculids, peanut worms, unsegmented protostomate marine worms
characterized by the introvert, a contractile organ used in locomotion
(Golfingia, Phascolion, Sipunculus)
- Vestimentifera
vestimentifers, phylum first described in 1985 for genera formerly
considered to be pogonophorans (Escarpia, Lamellibrachia, Ridgeia)
- Conodonta
conodonts, group of conoidal shaped fossils (Polygnathus)
- Brachiopoda
brachiopods, lamp shells; a marine lophophorate phylum of shelled
animals with an extensive fossil record; Lingula is possibly
the oldest genus with known living representatives
- Bryozoa
(=Ectoprocta, Polyzoa) bryozoans, ectoprocts, polyzoans, 'moss'
animals; a lophophorate & coelomate phylum of aquatic & mostly
colonial animals; (some classifications group Ectoprocta together with
Entoprocta as Bryozoa) (Bugula, Membranipora, Plumatella)
- Entoprocta
(=Kamptozoa) entoprocts, kamptozoans; a marine pseudocoelomate phylum,
mostly sessile filter feeders (Loxosoma)
- Mollusca
molluscs, mollusks, soft bodied animals mostly with an internal or
external calcareous shell
- Aplacophora
solenogasters, deep-sea worm like animals
- Polyplacophora
modern chitons (Chiton, Tonicella)
- Monoplacophora
mostly fossil, living species not discovered until 1977 (Neopilina)
- Gastropoda
slugs, snails & their relatives
- Prosobranchia
snails (Buccinum, Calliostoma, Cerithium, Conus, Cypraea,
Haliotis, Littorina, Murex, Oliva, Patella,
Strombus, Thais)
- Heterobranchia
(Architectonica, Nerinea, Pyramidella,
Turbonilla)
- Opisthobranchia
slugs
- Anaspidea
(=Aplysiomorpha) (Aplysia — sea
hares)
- Cephalaspidea
(Acteon)
- Gymnosomata
(Clione)
- Notaspidea
(Pleurobranchaea)
- Nudibranchia
(Acanthodoris)
- Pulmonata
- Archaeopulmonata
(Melampus)
- Basommatophora
(Biomphalaria, Bulinus, Lymnaea)
- Stylommatophora
land snails (Achatina, Arion, Helix, Liguus, Limax,
Partula, Polymita,
Succinea)
- Cephalopoda
cephalopods
- Nautiloidea
once abundant, Nautilus is now the only genus with
living representatives
- Ammonoidea
ammonites & their relatives, only known from fossils
(Ammonites)
- Coleoidea
group containing all living cephalopods
other than Nautilus
- Belemnitida
belemnites, fossils (Belemnites, Gonioteuthis)
- Octopoda
octopods, octopuses, devilfishes (Argonauta, Eledone,
Octopus)
- Sepiida
cuttlefish; often grouped with squid as Decapoda (Euprymna,
Sepia, Spirula)
- Teuthida
squid; often grouped with cuttlefish as Decapoda (Illex,
Loligo, Sepioteuthis, Todarodes)
- Vampyromorpha
vampire squid
- Bivalvia
bivalves, pelecypods, lamellibranchs, includes clams, mussels,
oysters etc with laterally hinged bivalve shells (Arca,
Cardium, Crassostrea, Dreissena D. polymorpha — zebra mussel,
Macoma, Mactra, Modiolus, Mya, Mytilus, Pecten, Unio, Venus)
- Scaphopoda
razor shells, tusk shells, tooth shells (Dentalium)
- Arthropoda
arthropods, 'jointed legged animals' characterized by segmented bodies
and jointed appendages; have gills or tracheae; easily the largest
phylum of all animals & of great economic importance, possibly a
polyphyletic group
- Crustacea
crustaceans, mainly aquatic animals with gills and
a dorsal carapace or shell, includes crabs, lobsters, shrimps etc
- Branchiopoda
branchiopods
- Anostraca
fairy shrimps (Artemia)
- Cladocera
water fleas (Bosmina, Daphnia)
- Conchostraca
clam shrimps (Leptestheria)
Notostraca
tadpole shrimps (Lepidurus, Triops)
- Branchiura
fish lice; incl in Maxillopoda of some authors (Argulus,
Chonopeltis)
- Cephalocarida
- Cirripedia
barnacles; incl in Maxillopoda of some authors (Balanus,
Lepas)
- Copepoda
copepods; incl in Maxillopoda of some authors (Acartia,
Calanus, Caligus, Cyclops, Diaptomus, Ergasilus, Harpacticus)
- Malacostraca
large group with heavily calcified external skeleton, two
pairs of well-developed antennae, 8 segments in thorax each
with a pair of appendages, 6-7 segments in abdomen; many well
known representatives, including:
- Decapoda
- Natantia
prawns, shrimps
(Alpheus, Crangon, Hippolyte, Macrobrachium,
Pandalus, Penaeus)
- Reptantia
- Anomura
hermit crabs (Callianassa, Pagurus, Upogebia)
- Astacura
crayfish,
true lobsters (Astacus, Cambarus, Homarus,
Nephrops, Orconectes, Procambarus)
- Brachyura
true crabs (Callinectes C.sapidus
— blue crab, Cancer, Maja, Ocypode, Scylla,
Uca)
- Palinura
slipper lobsters, spiny lobsters (Jasus,
Palinurus, Panulirus)
- Euphausiacea
krill (Meganyctiphanes, Thysanoessa)
- Stomatopoda
mantis shrimps (Squilla)
- Amphipoda
amphipods (Corophium, Gammarus, Talorchestia)
- Cumacea
cumaceans
- Isopoda
isopods, pill bugs, woodlice (Armadillidium, Idotea,
Ligia, Limnoria, Oniscus, Porcellio)
- Mysidacea
mysids (Mysis, Neomysis)
- Ostracoda
ostracods; incl in Maxillopoda of some authors (Candona,
Limnocythere)
- Trilobitomorpha
trilobites, known only from fossils (Calymene, Phacops)
- Chelicerata
- Arachnida
arachnids, spiders & their allies
- Acari
mites, ticks (Amblyomma, Boophilus, Dermacentor,
Eriophyes, Haemaphysalis, Ixodes, Oribates, Psoroptes,
Sarcoptes, Tetranychus, Varroa)
- Araneae
true spiders (Araneus, Erigone, Gnaphosa, Pardosa,
Tarentula)
- Opiliones
(=Phalangiida) harvesters
- Pseudoscorpionida
(=Pseudoscorpiones) false scorpions, pseudoscorpions (Roncus)
- Scorpiones
true scorpions (Buthus, Centruroides, Tityus)
- Solpugida
(=Solifugae) sun spiders (Solpuga)
- Merostomata
merostomatans, horseshoe crabs
- Xiphosura
king crabs (Limulus)
- Pycnogonida
(=Pantopoda) pycnogonids, pantopods, sea spiders (Pycnogonum)
- Smaller arthropod and allied
groups
- Arthropleurida
arthropleuridans, fossil group (Arthropleura)
- Onychophora
onychophorans, velvet worms, small wormlike creatures from
humid environments which crawl like caterpillars, show
characteristcs of both the annelid and arthropod phyla (Peripatus)
- Pentastomida
pentastomids, tongue worms, parasitic group of uncertain
affinities (Linguatula)
- Tardigrada
tardigrades, waterbears, very small animals with a thick
nonchitinous cuticle and 4 pairs of unjointed legs (Echiniscus,
Macrobiotus)
- Myriapoda
myriapods (sometimes grouped with Insecta in the arthropod
subphylum Uniramia)
- Chilopoda
centipedes (Lithobius, Scolopendra)
- Diplopoda
millipedes (Glomeris, Polydesmus)
- Pauropoda
pauropods (Allopauropus)
- Symphyla
(=Symphylida)
- Hexapoda
insects and some closely related more ancient groups, all with six
walking legs
- Entognatha
- Collembola
springtails, very abundant & widely distributed (Isotoma,
Onychiurus)
- Protura
very small & eyeless with enlarged forelegs (Eosentomon)
- Diplura
two pronged bristletails (position unclear but
traditionally included in Entognatha along with
Collembola and Protura) (Campodea)
- Insecta
insects
- Anoplura
sucking lice, true lice (Pediculus, Solenopotes)
- Coleoptera
beetles (includes Buprestoidea Caraboidea
Lampyris noctiluca — glow worm Leptinotarsa
decemlineata — Colorado Beetle Strepsiptera)
- Dermaptera
earwigs (Forficula, Labidura)
- Dictyoptera
- Blattodea
(=Blattaria) cockroaches (Blaberus, Blattella,
Periplaneta americana — American cockroach)
- Mantodea
(=Manteodea) mantids (Mantis, Tenodera)
- Diptera
true flies (Aedes aegypti — malaria mosquito Chironomidae
Drosophila
— fruit flies Tachinidae)
- Ephemeroptera
mayflies, shadflies (Baetis, Ephemera, Hexagenia,
Rhithrogena)
- Hemiptera
- Heteroptera
true bugs
- Homoptera
- Aphidoidea
aphids, plant lice
- Cicadoidea
cicadas
- Coccoidea
mealy bugs, scale insects
- Psylloidea
jumping plant lice
- Hymenoptera
includes social
wasps and ants
- Symphyta
sawflies
- Apocrita
- Evanioidea
- Ichneumonoidea
- Pelecinoidea
(Pelecinus)
- Chalcidoidea
chalcid
wasps
- Proctotrupoidea
- Formicoidea
ants
- Vespoidea
true wasps
- Sphecoidea
- Apoidea
bees (Apis mellifera — honeybee)
- Isoptera
termites,
white ants (Coptotermes, Nasutitermes, Reticulitermes)
- Lepidoptera
butterflies & moths
- Bombycoidea
(Bombyx mori — silk moth)
- Cossoidea
- Gelechioidea
- Geometroidea
- Noctuoidea
noctuid moths (Lymantria
dispar — gypsy moth)
- Papilionoidea
butterflies (Vanessa)
- Pyraloidea
- Sphingoidea
- Tineoidea
- Tortricoidea
- Yponomeutoidea
- Zygaenoidea
- Mallophaga
bird lice, biting lice (Menopon)
- Mecoptera
scorpionflies (Boreus, Panorpa)
- Megaloptera
alder flies, dobson flies, fish flies (Chauliodes,
Sialis)
- Neuroptera
(=Planipennia) dobsonflies, doodlebugs, lacewings (Ankylopteryx,
Chrysopa, Chrysoperla, Myrmeleontidae — antlions)
- Odonata
damselflies, dragonflies (Aeschna, Argia, Calopteryx,
Ischnura, Libellula, Orthetrum, Sympetrum)
- Orthoptera
- Phasmida
(=Phasmatodea) leaf insects, stick insects (Carausius,
Cuniculina)
- Saltatoria
crickets, grasshoppers, groundhoppers, katydids,
locusts (Acheta, Acrida, Chorthippus, Gryllus,
Locusta migratoria — migratory locust, Melanoplus,
Oxya, Schistocerca gragaria — desert locust, Tettigonia)
- Plecoptera
(=Perlaria) stone flies (Isoperla, Leuctra, Nemoura)
- Psocoptera
bark lice, book lice (Caecilius, Loensia, Psocus)
- Siphonaptera
fleas (Ceratophyllus, Ctenocephalides, Xenopsylla)
- Strepsiptera
twisted wing insects
- Thysanoptera
thrips (Aelothrips, Frankliniella, Haplothrips,
Thrips)
- Thysanura
bristletails, silverfish (Lepisma)
- Trichoptera
caddis flies (Hydropsyche, Hydroptila, Limnephilus,
Rhyacophila)
- Hemichordata
hemichordates, marine wormlike animals which live in u-shaped burrows
in sand or mud, do have some chordate characteristics but not a
notochord as once erroneously thought
- Enteropneusta
acorn worms, tongue worms, solitary (Balanoglossus Saccoglossus)
- Planctosphaeroidea
only known from pelagic larval forms
- Pterobranchia
pterobranchs, mostly colonial (Cephalodiscus
Rhabdopleura)
- Graptolithina
graptolites, a group of marine colonial animals that lived from
the Cambrian to the mid-Carboniferous, most of them floated
freely about in the ocean, but some lived attached to the
bottom, most fossil graptolites look like nothing so much as
tiny sawblades and they have a checkered history of
classification — their affinities being very difficult make
out (Mediograptus)
- Phoronida
phoronids, lophophorate marine worm like animals of uncertain
affinities (Phoronis)
- Chordata
chordates, characterized by having a single dorsal nerve chord, a
notochord and pharyngeal gill slits at some stage of their life cycle
- Calcichordata
calcichordates, fossil group of uncertain lineage
- Urochordata
(=Tunicata) urochordates, tunicates, mostly sessile marine
organisms
- Ascidiacea
sea squirts (Botryllus Ciona)
- Larvacea
(=Appendicularia) appendicularians (Oikopleura)
- Thaliacea
chain tunicates, salps (Salpa)
- Cephalochordata
(=Acrania) cephalochordates, acraniates, lancelets, amphioxus,
small scaleless fish like animals (Branchiostoma)
- Craniata
craniates, have skulls (often subdivided into two groups — the
Agnatha lacking jaws & the Gnathostomata with jaws)
- Myxini
hagfishes, jawless eel shaped marine fish (Eptatretus Myxine)
- Vertebrata
vertebrates, have backbones, group includes lampreys and all
jawed vertebrates:
- 'Fish like' groups
:-
- Pituriaspida
jawless armoured vertebrates known only from Devonian of
Australia (Pituriaspis Neeyambaspis)
- Pteraspidomorphi
(=Diplorhina) pteraspidomorphs, Ordovician/Devonian jawless
vertebrates
- Cephalaspidomorphi
(=Monorhina)
- Anaspidiformes
anaspids, Silurian fossils
- Cephalaspidiformes
(=Osteostraci) cephalaspids,
osteostracans, armoured fossils
- Petromyzontiformes
(=Hyperoartii) lampreys (Lampetra Petromyzon)
- Placodermi
placoderms, jointed neck fish, armoured fossils
- Chondrichthyes
cartilaginous fish — dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicula
— dogfish, Squalus acanthias — spiny dogfish,
spurdog), rays (Torpedo — electric rays), sharks (Carcharodon
carcharias — white shark) etc
- Actinopterygii
(=Osteichthyes) ray-finned fish; includes most living 'bony'
fish (teleosts) (Anguilla — eels, Carassius
auratus — goldfish, Ctenopharyngodon idella —
grass carp, Cyprinus carpio — carp, Gadus morhua
— carp, Oncorhynchus — salmon, Salmo —
salmon and trout,
- Sarcopterygii
lobe-finned fish — coelacanths (Latimeria),
lung fish etc; now considered to also include all tetrapod
groups more traditionally considered separately (see below)
- 'Tetrapod' groups
'with four limbs'; these may also be categorized as Amniota
(mammals, reptiles, dinosaurs and birds), with all living and
fossil amphibians placed in various non-amniote groups; Amphibia and Reptilia together are sometimes referred
to as 'herptiles'
- Amphibia
amphibians spend part of their life in water, breathe through
skin & gills, lay eggs in water and lack scales, cold
blooded
- Labyrinthodontia
fossils
- Lepospondyli
fossils
- Lissamphibia
includes all living amphibians
- Anura
(=Salienta) frogs (Rana), toads (Bufo bufo
— common toad, Bufo marinus — marine toad,
cane toad, Dominican toad, Xenopus laevis —
clawed toad)
- Caudata
(=Urodela) salamanders, newts (Notophthalmus
viridescens, Pleurodeles waltlii, Triturus
cristatus — crested newt, Triturus vulgaris
— common newt), mudpuppy (Necturus maculosus)
- Gymnophiona
(=Apoda) caecilians
- Reptilia
reptiles have scales and an amniote egg adapted to survival
out of water, cold blooded and mostly well adapted to life on
land; contains many fossil groups including the dinosaurs
; modern taxonomy often places the lizards,
crocodiles, birds, Sphenodon, and their extinct relatives into
one amniote group — the Diapsida ; some reptilian groups with living representatives are:
- Testudines
tortoises, turtles
- Cryptodira
modern turtles
- Squamata
- Sauria
crocodiles lizards
- Amphisbaenia
worm lizards
- Serpentes
snakes
- Aves
birds have feathers, no teeth, modified forelimbs (wings), can
regulate their body temperature and have land adapted eggs
with shells (current theories place birds in a separate group
— the Archosauria along with dinosaurs, crocodiles &
their relatives); there are many orders of birds, some of the
better known ones with living representatives include:
- Anseriformes
ducks (Anas platyrhynchos — domestic duck),
geese (Anser anser — domestic goose), swans
- Apodiformes
hummingbirds (Trochilidae), swifts (Apodidae)
- Apterygiformes
kiwis (Apteryx australis — brown kiwi, Apteryx
owenii — little spotted kiwi)
- Caprimulgiformes
goatsuckers (Caprimulgidae, Chordeiles minor —
common nighthawk)
- Casuariiformes
cassowaries, emus
- Charadriiformes
shore birds, auks (Alcidae), gulls and terns (Laridae),
plovers (Charadriidae), sandpipers (Scolopacidae)
- Ciconiiformes
herons and bitterns (Ardeidae), ibises (Threskiornithidae),
storks (Ciconiidae)
- Columbiiformes
pigeons and doves (Columbidae, Columba livia —
rock dove)
- Cuculiformes
cuckoos (Cuculidae)
- Falconiformes
falcons (Falconidae, Falco peregrinus —
peregrine falcon), hawks and old world vultures (Accipitridae,
Aquila chrysaetos — golden eagle), ospreys (Pandionidae,
Pandion haliaetus — osprey), new world vultures
(Cathartidae)
- Galliformes
domestic fowl (Coturnix japonica — quail, Gallus
gallus — domestic chicken, red junglefowl, Meleagris
gallopavo — turkey), game birds (Phasianus
colchicus — ring necked pheasant)
- Gaviiformes
divers and loons (Gaviidae)
- Gruiformes
cranes (Gruidae), rails (coots,
moorhens, gallinules — Rallidae)
- Passeriformes
passerines, perching birds, song birds
- Phoenocopteriformes
flamingos (Phoenicopterus)
- Pelecaniformes
cormorants (Phalacrocoracidae), frigatebirds (Fregatidae),
gannets and boobies (Sulidae), pelicans (Pelecanidae, Pelecanus
onocrotalus — great white pelican)
- Piciformes
woodpeckers (Picidae), toucans (Ramphastidae)
- Podicipediformes
grebes (Podicipedidae)
- Procellariiformes
albatrosses (Diomedeidae), fulmars, shearwaters and
petrels (Procellariidae)
- Psittaciformes
parrots (Melopsittacus undulatus — budgerigar)
- Rheiformes
rheas (Rheidae)
- Sphenisciformes
penguins (Spheniscidae, Aptenodytes forsteri —
emperor penguin, Pygoscelis adeliae Adelie
penguin)
- Strigiformes
barn owls (Tytonidae, Tyto alba — barn owl),
owls (Strigidae, Asio otus — long-eared owl, Nyctea
scandiaca — snowy owl)
- Struthioniformes
cassowaries (Casuariidae), emus (Dromaiidae, Dromaius
novaehollandiae (larger emu), ostriches (Struthionidae,
Struthio camelus — ostrich)
- Mammalia
mammals can regulate their body temperatures, generally have
hair, bear live young & nourish them with milk produced by
mammary glands, the majority are placental in addition to numerous groups known only
from fossils the mammalian orders are:
- Artiodactyla
even toed hoofed mammals — camels (Camelus —
bactrian camel, dromedary), cattle (Bos indicus
— zebu cattle, Bos taurus — domestic cattle
of Europe, former USSR and USA, Bubalus bubalis
— Asian water buffalo), deer, giraffes, goats (Capra
hircus — domestic goat), hippos, llamas, pigs (Sus
scrofa — domestic pig), sheep (Ovies aries
— domestic sheep)
- Carnivora
carnivores — badgers, bears, cats (Felis catus
— domestic cat), dogs (Canis familiaris —
domestic dog), ferrets (Mustela furo — domestic
ferret), otters, seals, weasels, wolves
- Cetacea
dolphins (Delphinus delphis — common dolphin, Tursiops
truncatus — bottlenose dolphin), whales (blue
whale — Balaenoptera musculus, humpback whale
— Megaptera, killer whale — Orcinus orca,
minke whale — Balaenoptera acutorostrata)
- Chiroptera
bats (big brown bat — Eptesicus fuscus, hoary
bat — Lasiurus cinereus), flying foxes (Pteropus)
- Dermoptera
flying lemurs (Cynocephalus)
- Desmostylia
extinct mammal group
- Edentata
edentates — anteaters (giant anteater — Myrmecophaga
tridactyla, pygmy anteater — Cyclopes
didactylus), armadillos (giant armadillo — Priodontes
maximus, nine-banded armadillo — Dasypus
novemcinctus), sloths (three-toed sloths — Bradypus,
two-toed sloths — Choloepus)
- Embrithopoda
- Hyracoidea
hyraxes (common rock hyrax — Procavia capensis)
- Insectivora
insectivores — hedgehogs (west European hedgehog — Erinaceus
europaeus), moles (European mole — Talpa
europaea), shrews (comon shrew — Sorex araneus,
pygmy shrew — Sorex hoyi)
- Lagomorpha
lagomorphs — hares (common hares, jackrabbits — Lepus),
pikas (Ochotona), rabbits (Oryctolagus
cuniculus — common European rabbit, Sylvilagus
— cottontail rabbits)
- Marsupialia
marsupials — kangaroos and wallabies (Macropodidae,
eastern grey kangaroo — Macropus giganteus, red
or plains kangaroo — Macropus rufus), koalas (Phascolarctos
cinereus), wombats (Vombatus)
- Monotremata
egg laying mammals, monotremes — platypus (duck-billed
platypus — Ornithorhynchus anatinus), echidnas
or spiny anteaters (Tachyglossus, Zaglossus)
- Perissodactyla
odd toed hoofed mammals — horses (Equus asinus
— ass, donkey, Equus caballus — true horse),
rhinoceroses (black rhino — Diceros bicornis,
white rhino — Ceratotherium simum), tapirs (Tapirus),
zebras (mountain or Hartmann's zebra — Equus zebra)
- Pholidota
pangolins (Manis)
- Primates
lemurs (Lemuridae, ring tail lemurs — Lemur,
brown lemurs — Eulemur), marmosets (Callithrix
jacchus — common marmoset), monkeys (Macaca
— macaques, Pan troglodytes — chimpanzee, Papio
— baboons, Saimiri sciureus — squirrel
monkey), tamarins (Saguinus), vervets & man (Homo
sapiens — modern man)
- Proboscidea
elephants (african elephant — Loxodonta africana,
Asian elephant — Elephas maximus), mammoths
- Rodentia
rodents — cavies (Cavia porcellus — guinea
pig), chinchillas (Chinchilla), gerbils (Meriones
unguiculatus — Mongolian gerbil), hamsters (Cricetus
cricetus — common hamster, Cricetulus griseus
— Chinese hamster, Mesocricetus auratus —
golden hamster), mice (Mus musculus — house
mouse), porcupines, rats (Rattus norvegicus —
Norway rat, Rattus rattus — black rat)
- Sirenia
dugongs (Dugong dugon), manatees (Trichechus)
- Tubulidentata
aadvarks (Orycteropus afer)
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