Invertebrates are animals without a backbone. So no flying fish are NOT invertebrates.
Yes, because Flying fish or Parexocoetus brachypterus,eat insect, larvae, plankton, smaller fishes, small crustaceans, and other small organisms.
Flying fish have gills because they are aquatic animals, just like other fish, and only fly for short periods of time to escape predators.
Yes, flying fish are a good food source and are even a popular dish in the Caribbean. They are often prepared by being battered and fried.
No, flying fish are fish and not mammals.
no
invertebrates
Insects are the only flying invertebrates.
invertebrates
insects
no, fish are vertebrates.
No. Any animal you can think of, except for fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals are invertebrates - just think of the diversity. Jellyfish, worms, insects, crabs, spiders, millipedes, starfish, all invertebrates! Flying, swimming, crawling and scuttling all around you, and with plenty of differences.
Fish are vertebrates, jellyfish are invertebrates.
No, all fish are vertebrates.
Insects are an excellent example of an entire order of flying invertebrates. They have no vertebral structures, are generally structured by chitin-based exoskeletons, and are often winged.
No, the are cephalopods which are invertebrates.
No, they are cephalopods which are invertebrates. Fish are vertebrates.
no there is no such thing as a flying fish