Anthozoa (a Graecis ἄνθος 'flos' + ζώα 'animalia', e specie eorum stationis polypodi) sunt classisanimalium intra phylumCnidariorum digestorum. Anthozois, aliorum cnidarianorum dissimilibus, non est statio vitalis medusae. Potius spermatozoa et ova liberant, quae planulam formant, quae vicissim ad quoddam substratum adhaeret, in quo animal crescit. Nonnulla anthozoa se quoque asexualiter reproducere possunt per gemmationem. Sunt plus quam 6100 species descriptae.[1]
Phylogenia
Anthozoa in tres subclasses dividi possunt: Octocorallia, Hexacorallia, Ceriantharia, quae greges monophyleticos constituunt, variasque in quaque subclassi polyporum structuras late monstrant.[2] Hic autem habes classificationem secundum World Register of Marine Species:[3]
Crowther, A. L. 2011. Class Anthozoa Ehrenberg, 1834. In Animal biodiversity: an outline of higher-level classification and survey of taxonomic richness, ed. Z.-Q. Zhang. Zootaxa 3148:19–23. PDF.
Oliver W. A., Jr. 1996. Origins and relationships of Paleozoic coral groups and the origin of the Scleractinia. In Paleobiology and Biology of Corals, ed. G. D. J. Stanley, 107–134. Columbi Ohii: The Paleontological Society.
Stampar, S. N., M. M. Maronna, M. V. Kitahara, J. D. Reimer, et A. C. Morandini. 2014. Fast-Evolving Mitochondrial DNA in Ceriantharia: A Reflection of Hexacorallia Paraphyly? PLoS ONE 9(1):e86612. PMID 24475157. | doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086612. Textus.