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  2. Marine invertebrates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_invertebrates

    Marine invertebrates are invertebrate animals that live in marine habitats, and make up most of the macroscopic life in the oceans. It is a polyphyletic blanket term that contains all marine animals except the marine vertebrates , including the non- vertebrate members of the phylum Chordata such as lancelets , sea squirts and salps .

  3. List of marine aquarium invertebrate species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_marine_aquarium...

    This is a list of various species of marine invertebrates, animals without a backbone, that are commonly found in aquariums kept by hobby aquarists. Some species are intentionally collected for their desirable aesthetic characteristics. Others are kept to serve a functional role such as consuming algae in the aquarium.

  4. Marine life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_life

    Animals are multicellular eukaryotes, [note 2] and are distinguished from plants, algae, and fungi by lacking cell walls. [182] Marine invertebrates are animals that inhabit a marine environment apart from the vertebrate members of the chordate phylum; invertebrates lack a vertebral column. Some have evolved a shell or a hard exoskeleton.

  5. Cnidaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cnidaria

    Pacific sea nettles, Chrysaora fuscescens. Cnidaria (/ n ɪ ˈ d ɛər i ə, n aɪ-/ nih-DAIR-ee-ə, NY-) [4] is a phylum under kingdom Animalia containing over 11,000 species [5] of aquatic invertebrates found both in fresh water and marine environments (predominantly the latter), including jellyfish, hydroids, sea anemones, corals and some of the smallest marine parasites.

  6. Sponge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sponge

    Although adult sponges are fundamentally sessile animals, some marine and freshwater species can move across the sea bed at speeds of 1–4 mm (0.039–0.157 in) per day, as a result of amoeba-like movements of pinacocytes and other cells. A few species can contract their whole bodies, and many can close their oscula and ostia. Juveniles drift ...

  7. Anthozoa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthozoa

    Anthozoa is a subphylum of marine invertebrates which includes sessile cnidarians such as the sea anemones, stony corals, soft corals and sea pens.Adult anthozoans are almost all attached to the seabed, while their larvae can disperse as planktons.

  8. Ctenophora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ctenophora

    The Cestida ("belt animals") are ribbon-shaped planktonic animals, with the mouth and aboral organ aligned in the middle of opposite edges of the ribbon. There is a pair of comb-rows along each aboral edge, and tentilla emerging from a groove all along the oral edge, which stream back across most of the wing-like body surface.

  9. Aquatic animal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_animal

    These animals include sessile organisms (e.g. sponges, sea anemones, corals, sea pens, sea lilies and sea squirts, some of which are reef-builders crucial to the biodiversity of marine ecosystems), sedentary filter feeders (e.g. bivalve molluscs) and ambush predators (e.g. flatfishes and bobbit worms, who often burrow or camouflage within the ...