Cnidarians are water animals that have a simple, usually
symmetrical, body with a mouth opening. Stinging cells on tentacles around the
mouth catch prey. Cnidarians are either bell-shaped and mobile, like the
jellyfish, or tubes anchored to one spot, like coral and sea anemones.
All cnidarians have stinging cells. Many are able to reproduce
asexually (without mating) and sexually. There are 9,000 species.
(corals, sea fans, sea
pens, sea anemones)
Features: anchored polyp (tube-like)
form, carnivorous (eat flesh), often in groups
(jellyfish)
Features: free-living, medusoid
(bell-shaped) form, mouth on underside
(hydrozoans)
Features: some free-living, others
anchored, most in colonies (large groups), mostly carnivorous
(box
jellyfish)
Features: free-living, box-shaped
medusoid form, with long tentacles from corners