One way to think about biodiversity is to sort organisms by general body plan. Each of these broad groupings is called a phylum (the plural is phyla). If species are like twigs, phyla are like tree trunks.
ANIMALS
Hemichordata acorn worms
Chaetognatha arrow worms
Echinodermata sea stars, sea cucumbers, sea urchins
Entoprocta sessile, ciliated organisms
Phoronida tube worms
Brachiopoda lamp shells
Ectoprocta bryozoans
Tardigrada water bears
Echiura spoon worms
Sipuncula peanut worms
Vestimentifera beard worms, tube worms
Arthropoda insects, crustaceans
Annelida typical worms
Mollusca snails, clams, squids, octopuses
Gnathostomulida ciliated worms
Loricifera loriciferans
Priapulida priapulids
Kinorhyncha kinorhynchs
Acanthocephala common parasites
Rotifera rotifers
Nematomorpha horsehair worms
Nematoda nematodes, roundworms
Gastrotricha gastrotrichs
Nemertina ribbon worms
Mesozoa tiny parasites
Platyhelminthes flatworms
Ctenophora comb jellies, sea walnuts
Cnidaria jellyfish, coral, anemones
Porifera sponges
Placozoa amoeba-like animals
Bacillariophyta diatoms
Chlorarachnida phototrophic amoebas
Chlorophyta green algae
Chrysophyta golden and yellow-green algae
Ciliophora ciliates
Cryptophyta cryptomonads, phytoflagellates
Dinoflagellata dinoflagellates
Ebridians zoomastigotes
Ellobiopsida ellobiopsids
Euglenophyta euglenoid flagellates
Foraminifera forams
Haplosporidia haplosporidians
Haptophyta coccolithophores
Labyrinthulomycota slime nets
Microspora microsporidians
Myxozoa myxozoans
Paramyzea paramyxeans
Phaeophyta brown algae
Raphidophyta raphidophytes
Rhizopoda amastigote amoebas
Rhodophyta red algae
Xenophyophora xenophyophores
Mycophyta lichens
Fermenting bacteria
Chemoautotrophic chemosynthetic
bacteria bacteria
Omnibacteria denitrifying bacteria
Pseudomonads Gram-negative, flagellated, rod-shaped bacteria
Cyanophyta blue-green algae
Anaerobic sulfur and
phototrophic non-sulfur
bacteria bacteria
Thiopneutes sulfur-reducing bacteria
Spirochaetae spirochetes
Halophilic bacteria salt-loving bacteria
Methanocreatrices methane-producing bacteria
Ocean Planet Exhibition Floorplan
gene carl feldman (gene@seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov) (301) 286-9428
Judith Gradwohl, Smithsonian Institution (Curator/Ocean Planet)