invertebrate, any animal lacking a backbone. The invertebrates include the
tunicates and
lancelets of phylum Chordata, as well as all animal phyla other than Chordata. The major invertebrate phyla include: the sponges (
Porifera), coelenterates (
Cnidaria), echinoderms (
Echinodermata), flatworms (
Platyhelminthes), roundworms (
Nematoda), segmented worms (
Annelida), mollusks (
Mollusca), and arthropods (
Arthropoda). Invertebrates are tremendously diverse, ranging from microscopic wormlike mezozoans (see
Mezozoa) to very large animals such as the giant
squid. Approximately 95% of all the earth's animal species are invertebrates; of these the vast majority are
insects and other arthropods. Invertebrates are important as parasites and are essential elements of all ecological communities.
See A. Kaestner, Invertebrate Zoology (3 vol., 1967-70); R. D. Barnes, Invertebrate Zoology (5th ed. 1987); R. Buchsbaum et al., Animals without Backbones (3d ed. 1987).
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