No, a snail is a gastropod.
Its neither.Its actually a Gastropod.
No, jellyfish are neither of these. The gastropods and bivalves belong to the phylum Mollusca, whilst jellyfish are Cnideria. Jellyfish are in many ways more primitive than molluscs, and lack many of their structural features.
There are three main classes of mollusks: Gastropoda (snails and slugs), Bivalvia (clams, mussels, oysters), and Cephalopoda (octopuses, squids, nautiluses). Each class has unique characteristics and habitats.
Domain: Eukayria Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Molluska Class: Cephalopod Order: Octopoda
A cephalopod with an external, spiral shell; living in tropical seas.
No, a snail is not a bivalve. Snails are gastropods, which are a type of mollusk that typically have a coiled shell. Bivalves, on the other hand, include creatures like clams and mussels, which have a shell consisting of two parts or valves.
The phylum is Mollusca - all clams are mollusks, like any shelled bivalve. Snails and slugs are also mollusks.
A snail is a gastropod. Gastro is latin for stomach. Pod is latin for foot. Meaning...stomach-foot. Which is accurate since a snail slides around on their stomach, also making that their foot.
All snails are in the Animal Kingdom of life, in the Mollusk Phylum, and the Gastropod class.
The octopus belongs to the phylum, Mollusca. It shares this phylum with its brethren squid and mollusks. It is a cephalopod, the octopus; therefore, Cephalopoda would be its class. Hope this helps.
A snail is a mollusk, but not a cephalopod. That is; that they are in the Kingdom Animalia, and the Phylum Mollusca. Snails are actually members of the Class Gastropoda, which translates to "body-foot". Cephalopods belong to the Kingdom Animalia and the Phylum Mollusca, but their Class is Cephalopoda, which translates to "head-foot". Some common Cephalopods are octopi and squid.