Yes, giant tube worms belong to a group of marine tube worms known as vestimentiferans. These worms are related to other tube-dwelling and tube-building worms found in marine environments.
the tube worms live in the abyssopelagic zone which is in the ocean.
No worms have backbones. They are all invertebrates.
,
No. Worms are part of the Animal Kingdom.
Tube worms shoot silky looking netting onto coral, which makes fish tanks very unattractive. Copperbanded butterfly fish will usually eat tube worms. Wrasse and Dottyback fish will also eat tube worms.
A worm typically belongs to the Kingdom Animalia within the Phylum Annelida.
njnhjuuih
Yes. Worms belong to the Kingdom Animalia.
heartworms which are also apart of the catogory roundworms
>Kingdom: Animalia>Subkingdom: Eumetazoa>Phylum: Nematoda>Classes: Chromadorea, Secernetea, Enoplea>Orders: search online for "Nematode orders".
The long coiled tube in worms where many eggs are stored is called the ovary. It is an essential reproductive organ in female worms that produces and stores eggs until they are released for fertilization.