Chaetognatha

E393487

Chaetognatha, commonly known as arrow worms, are a phylum of predatory, transparent marine worms characterized by their torpedo-shaped bodies and grasping head spines.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Chaetognatha canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf phylum
taxon
bodyCavityType pseudocoelomate-like
bodyPlan worm-like
bodyShape torpedo-shaped
bodyTransparency transparent
bodyWall longitudinal muscles
commonName arrow worms
containsOrder Aphragmophora
Phragmophora
describedBy Karl Georg Baird
developmentType direct development
diet copepods
fish larvae
zooplankton
distribution worldwide oceans
environment marine
etymology from Greek 'chaite' (hair) and 'gnathos' (jaw)
feedingType predatory
fertilizationType internal fertilization
firstDescriptionYear 1853
fossilRange Cambrian to Recent
hasBodyRegion head
tail
trunk
hasCuticle true
hasFossilRecord true
hasGraspingSpines true
hasGraspingSpinesOn head
hasSensoryStructure ciliary fence receptors
eyes
kingdom Animalia
locomotion darting swimming
lateral body undulations
nervousSystem ganglionated nervous system
notableGenus Sagitta
Spadella
reproductionMode sexual reproduction
roleInEcosystem important zooplankton predator
link between primary consumers and higher predators
segmentation unsegmented body
sexualSystem hermaphroditic
superphylum Protostomia
symmetry bilateral symmetry
trophicLevel secondary consumer
typicalHabitat benthic zone
pelagic zone
planktonic zone
usedAs indicator of water masses

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Lophotrochozoa includesTaxon Chaetognatha
Protostomia includes Chaetognatha