Yes. Bees, like all insects, do not have a bony skeleton -- so no vertebrae. They have a hard outer casing called an exoskeleton which gives the body its shape.
Yes because they have no backbone.
it is an invertebre
They have no backbones. See related questions below for more detail.
In the sense that they do not have a spine, or vertebra: yes. Bees, like all insects, are invertebrate. Their body shape is formed by their hard outer casing.
bees and butterflys
A bee is an insect. The type of invertebrate it is is an arthropod.
arthropod e.g. flies, crickets, mosquitoes, beetles, butterflies, and bees.
yes i think flies,midgets bees,wasps & lady-birds are invertebrates that can fly
All insects are invertebrates. Common examples include beetles, flies, bees, wants, wasps, butterflies, moths, and grasshoppers.
A Bee is an Invertebrate.A bee had an exoskeleton so it is an invertebrate.
invertebrate - has exoskeleton
An invertebrate.
It is an invertebrate 