AnimaliaacceptedsubkingdomAccepted
Eumetazoa

Eumetazoa

Radiata

GBIF:165236973

PROFILE

Species Profile

Characteristics

Extant Ediacaran – Present 610-0 Ma

ABOUT

Descriptions(1)

Radiata or Radiates is a historical taxonomic rank that was used to classify animals with radially symmetric body plans. The term Radiata is no longer accepted, as it united several different groupings of animals that do not form a monophyletic group under current views of animal phylogeny. The similarities once offered in justification of the taxon, such as radial symmetry, are now taken to be the result of either incorrect evaluations by early researchers or convergent evolution, rather than an indication of a common ancestor. Because of this, the term is used mostly in a historical context. In the early 19th century, Georges Cuvier united Ctenophora and Cnidaria in the Radiata (Zoophytes). Thomas Cavalier-Smith, in 1983, redefined Radiata as a subkingdom consisting of Myxozoa, Placozoa, Cnidaria and Ctenophora. Lynn Margulis and K. V. Schwartz later redefined Radiata in their Five Kingdom classification, this time including only Cnidaria and Ctenophora. This definition is similar to the historical descriptor Coelenterata, which has also been proposed as a group encompassing Cnidaria and Ctenophora. Although radial symmetry is usually given as a defining characteristic in animals that have been classified in this group, there are clear exceptions and qualifications. Echinoderms, for example, exhibit unmistakable bilateral symmetry as larvae, and are now in the Bilateria. Ctenophores exhibit biradial or rotational symmetry, defined by tentacular and pharyngeal axes, on which two anal canals are located in two diametrically opposed quadrants. Some species within the cnidarian class Anthozoa are bilaterally symmetric (For example, Nematostella vectensis). It has been suggested that bilateral symmetry may have evolved before the split between Cnidaria and Bilateria, and that the radially symmetrical cnidarians have secondarily evolved radial symmetry, meaning the bilaterality in cnidarian species like N. vectensis has a primary origin. The differing definitions assigned by zoologists are listed in the table.

Author Work Date Name of group Taxa included Level of group Cuvier Le Règne Animal 1817 Zoophytes(Radiata in English translations) Échinodermes, Intestinaux (parasitic worms), Acalèphes (Ctenophora), Polypes (Cnidaria), Infusoires Embranchement (1 of 4) Cavalier-Smith "A 6-kingdom classification and a unified phylogeny" 1983 Radiata Myxozoa, Placozoa, Cnidaria, Ctenophora Subkingdom Margulis,Schwartz Five Kingdoms 1988 Radiata Cnidaria, Ctenophora Subkingdom Philippe et al. "Phylogenomics Revives Traditional Views on Deep Animal Relationships" 2009 Coelenterata Cnidaria, Ctenophora Proposed clade
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Common names used for this species across different languages and regions. 1 preferred.

engRadiataeng

Vernacular (common) names are the everyday names used for a species in different languages and regions. A single species may have dozens of common names worldwide. 1 name preferred.

engRadiata
engpreferred

CLASSIFICATION

Taxonomic Classification Tree

AnimaliaEumetazoa

MULTIMEDIA

Media Files(1)

Louis Agassiz in 1870, with drawings of animals then considered Radiates

Imageimage/jpeg

IMAGES

Gallery(1)

See Gallery

Occurrences with images

Source Information

English Wikipedia - Species Pages

checklist
Species pages extracted from the English Wikipedia article XML dump from 2022-08-02. Multimedia, vernacular names and textual descriptions are extracted, but only pages with a taxobox or speciesbox template are recognized. See https://github.com/mdoering/wikipedia-dwca for details.

Döring M (2022). English Wikipedia - Species Pages. Wikimedia Foundation. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/c3kkgh accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-15.

LicensePublished 8/2/2022View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
165236973
Dataset Key
cbb6498e-8927-405a-916b-576d00a6289b
Origin
source
Taxon ID
873449
Last Crawled
6/4/2026
Last Interpreted
6/4/2026