Classification of Animals
Animal Kingdom: Classification of Animals
Classification of Animals
Classification of Animals
What you'll learn
- Animal Kingdom (Animalia) — multicellular, heterotrophic, eukaryotic organisms lacking cell walls.
- Basis of classification: levels of organisation, symmetry, coelom, segmentation, notochord.
- Non-chordates: Porifera, Cnidaria, Platyhelminthes, Aschelminthes, Annelida, Arthropoda, Mollusca, Echinodermata, Hemichordata.
- Chordates: presence of notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal gill slits, post-anal tail.
- Key features that define each phylum and serve as NEET MCQ anchors.
Key concepts
Level 1 — Foundations
Basis of classification:
| Criterion | Divisions |
|---|---|
| Levels of organisation | Cellular → Tissue → Organ → Organ-system |
| Body symmetry | Asymmetrical / Radial / Bilateral |
| Coelom | Acoelomate / Pseudocoelomate / Coelomate |
| Segmentation | Present (Annelida, Arthropoda) / Absent |
| Notochord | Present (Chordata) / Absent (non-chordata) |
Phylum-wise summary:
- Porifera — sponges; cellular level; asymmetrical; aquatic; pores (ostia) and osculum; canal system; choanocytes (collar cells); skeleton of spicules/spongin. Examples: Sycon, Spongilla, Euspongia.
- Cnidaria (Coelenterata) — tissue level; radial symmetry; diploblastic; nematocysts (stinging cells); polymorphism (polyp/medusa). Examples: Hydra, Obelia, Aurelia, Physalia.
- Platyhelminthes — flatworms; organ-system level; bilateral; triploblastic; acoelomate; flame cells for excretion; parasitic mostly. Examples: Taenia (tapeworm), Fasciola (liver fluke), Planaria.
- Aschelminthes (Nematoda) — roundworms; pseudocoelomate; triploblastic; complete digestive system; dioecious. Examples: Ascaris, Wuchereria, Ancylostoma.
- Annelida — segmented worms; true coelom (eucoelomate); closed circulatory system; nephridia for excretion; setae for locomotion. Examples: Nereis, Pheretima (earthworm), Hirudinaria (leech).
- Arthropoda — largest phylum; jointed appendages; exoskeleton of chitin; open circulatory system; compound eyes; malphigian tubules (excretion). Examples: Apis (bee), Anopheles (mosquito), Limulus (king crab), Locusta (grasshopper).
- Mollusca — second largest phylum; soft body; mantle; radula (except Bivalvia); open circulatory system (except Cephalopoda). Examples: Pila (apple snail), Octopus, Sepia, Unio.
- Echinodermata — spiny skinned; water vascular system; deuterostomes; endoskeleton of calcareous ossicles; radial symmetry (adults). Examples: Asterias (starfish), Echinus (sea urchin), Holothuria (sea cucumber), Antedon (sea lily).
- Hemichordata — worm-like; gill slits; proboscis, collar, trunk. Example: Balanoglossus.
- Chordata — notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal gill slits, post-anal tail. Divided into Urochordata, Cephalochordata, Vertebrata.
Level 2 — JEE / NEET depth
Canal system in Porifera:
- Asconoid — simplest; e.g., Leucosolenia. Water enters through ostia → spongocoel → osculum.
- Syconoid — folded body wall; e.g., Sycon. Radial canals lined with choanocytes.
- Leuconoid — most complex; e.g., Spongilla. Flagellated chambers branching extensively — maximum filtering efficiency.
Nematocysts in Cnidaria:
- Stinging organelles within cnidoblasts (interstitial cells).
- Types: Penetrant (inject toxin), Volvent (entangle prey), Glutinant (sticky).
- Once discharged, cnidoblast is lost and must be replaced — hence called "nurse cells."
Coelom types:
- Acoelomate: No body cavity; mesoderm solid. Platyhelminthes.
- Pseudocoelomate: Cavity between mesoderm and endoderm (not fully lined by mesoderm). Aschelminthes.
- Coelomate (Eucoelomate): True coelom; cavity lined on all sides by mesodermal epithelium (peritoneum). Annelida, Arthropoda, Mollusca, Echinodermata, Chordata.
- Schizocoelous: Coelom formed by splitting of mesoderm — Annelida, Arthropoda, Mollusca.
- Enterocoelous: Coelom formed from outpouching of gut (archenteron) — Echinodermata, Hemichordata, Chordata.
Notochord:
- Flexible rod of cells; derived from mesoderm.
- Present throughout life in Amphioxus (Branchiostoma).
- In vertebrates, replaced by vertebral column in adults.
- Forms nucleus pulposus of intervertebral discs as remnant.
NEET: Identify phylum from given characters; match organism to phylum; distinguish coelomate types.
Worked example
MCQ type: A triploblastic, bilaterally symmetrical animal with pseudocoelom and complete digestive system belongs to which phylum?
Step 1 — Triploblastic + bilateral symmetry → rules out Porifera (cellular) and Cnidaria (diploblastic, radial).
Step 2 — Pseudocoelom → rules out Platyhelminthes (acoelomate) and Annelida/Arthropoda (true coelom).
Step 3 — Complete digestive system (mouth + anus) → rules out Platyhelminthes (incomplete gut).
Answer — Aschelminthes (Nematoda). Example organism: Ascaris lumbricoides.
Second type: Arrange phyla in increasing complexity of body organisation.
Porifera (cellular) < Cnidaria (tissue) < Platyhelminthes (organ) < Annelida (organ-system)
Note: Arthropoda, Mollusca, Echinodermata, Chordata also at organ-system level.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Arthropoda = closed circulatory system | Confusion with Annelida | Arthropoda has open circulatory system; Annelida has closed |
| Echinodermata adults are bilaterally symmetrical | Larvae ARE bilateral | Adults are radially symmetrical; larvae are bilaterally symmetrical |
| Coelenteron = coelom | Similar-sounding terms | Coelenteron is gut cavity of Cnidaria; coelom is body cavity lined by mesoderm |
| Platyhelminthes = pseudocoelomate | Coelom types mixed up | Platyhelminthes is acoelomate (no body cavity) |
| Balanoglossus = non-chordate | Phylum confusing | Hemichordata has pharyngeal gill slits — it is a deuterostome, closest relative of chordates |
Board exam drill
- Key feature anchor: Canal system → Porifera; Nematocysts → Cnidaria; Flame cells → Platyhelminthes; Nephridia → Annelida; Malpighian tubules → Arthropoda; Radula → Mollusca; Water vascular system → Echinodermata.
- Coelom: Acoelomate (Platyhelminthes) → Pseudocoelomate (Aschelminthes) → Eucoelomate (Annelida onwards).
- Largest phyla: Arthropoda (largest) > Mollusca (second largest).
- Notochord present throughout life only in cephalochordates (Amphioxus).
- Deuterostomes: Echinodermata, Hemichordata, Chordata (anus from blastopore).
NCERT diagrams to know
NCERT Class 11 Ch. 4 — Classification charts and specimen diagrams
Porifera body plan: Ostia → Spongocoel → Osculum (asconoid type)
Cnidaria: Polyp (sessile) ↔ Medusa (free-swimming) — polymorphism in Obelia
Coelom diagram:
Acoelomate (solid mesoderm) | Pseudocoelomate (cavity not lined) | Eucoelomate (peritoneum-lined)
Labels to memorise: Choanocytes, osculum, nematocyst, scolex (Taenia), proglottids, clitellum (earthworm), trochophore larva, water vascular system, ambulacral groove, notochord position.
Board/NEET tip: Every NEET paper has 3–4 MCQs from Animal Kingdom — focus on distinguishing features and examples.
Quick check
- What is the function of choanocytes in Porifera?
- Differentiate between acoelomate and pseudocoelomate with one example each.
- Which phylum has the largest number of species?
- What are the four unique features of phylum Chordata?
- Stretch: Why are Echinodermata larvae bilaterally symmetrical but adults radially symmetrical — what does this suggest about their evolution?
NCERT Chapter 4 link: Animal kingdom classification based on organisation, symmetry, coelom, segmentation, notochord. Ten non-chordate phyla + Chordata. Diploblastic = Cnidaria; triploblastic = all others. Canal system types in Porifera (ascon/sycon/leucon).
Exam connections: Coelom type is the single most frequently tested character — memorise acoelomate/pseudocoelomate/eucoelomate with examples. Matching organism to phylum via key feature (nematocyst, radula, water vascular system) is standard 1-mark MCQ. Notochord fate in vertebrates vs cephalochordates is 2-mark question.
Study strategy: Make a phylum comparison table with columns: symmetry, coelom, digestive system, circulatory system, excretory organ, special feature, example. Fill it once thoroughly — covers 80% of MCQs.
Interactive Exploration Suggestions (Drishti Live Worlds)
- Use the platform-native live simulation or PhET-style tool for this topic (number line, Venn, physics playground, molecule builder, sensor dashboard, etc.).
- Mirror / body / home activity: physically do the concept (count objects, measure, role-play) and photograph or describe for portfolio.
- Voice or text reflection with AI Mentor: explain the concept to a younger student or family member.
AI Mentor Prompts (Socratic, Board-Adaptive)
- "Explain this concept to a Class 6 student using one real example from an Indian home, school, market, or festival."
- "What is one common mistake students make here, and how would you catch yourself making it?"
- Stretch: "How does this connect to coding, robotics, money, health, environment, or a future career?"
Gamification, Portfolio & Parent Visibility
- Complete the core practice + one extension activity (photo, table, short reflection, or mini-project) for base XP + topic badge.
- 5-7 day streak or family discussion note = multiplier + visible artifact in parent/principal dashboard.
- Best real-world application stories (anonymised) featured on class or national leaderboard.
Robotics, STEM & Future Skills Bridges
- One hands-on project or measurement using the Drishti kit or household items that makes the concept physical.
- Direct link to at least one Future Skill track (Money Management, Green Tech, Cyber Defenders, Micro-Entrepreneurship, AI Mastery, Sustainable Living, Personality Development).
- Coding extension where relevant (simple script, simulation, or data logging).
NEP 2020 & Full Education OS Alignment
This material emphasises experiential "learning by doing", competency (apply/create/analyse), vocational exposure, critical thinking, and multidisciplinary connections. Designed to feed live worlds, AI Mentor (with memory), gamification, robotics, parent analytics, and future skills — not just exam prep.
Portfolio Evidence Idea: Your photo/table/reflection/project + one sentence on "How this helps me in real life or a possible future path."
Open the Practice tab for aligned questions (easy/medium/hard + case-based) with full AI scaffolding.
See curriculum for cross-links and the full future-skills/robotics chapters.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
Master this topic with Drishti OS
Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.
Start Free Practice