No, a waterbug is not a vertebrate. It instead numbers among the world's invertebrates. The humid, moist, wet niche-drawn bug serves as an insect class member that often is mistaken for cockroaches even though its examples instead include such true bugs as backswimmers, creeping water bugs, giant water bugs, smaller water striders, pond skaters, and water boatmen and scorpions.
Invertebrate as it does not have a backbone
All bugs have exoskeletons so they can't be a vertebrate.
No insects are vertebrates.
No. Vertebrates have spines and insects have exoskeletons.
Insects are eaten by both vertebrates and invertebrates.
No it does not. insects do not have vertebrae.
No; they aren't neither vertebrates or insects.
No, moths are insects.
only insects
No. There are insects which are invertebrates.
No insects are vertebrates.
Trapdoor spiders are arachnids not insects and they are inverts.
No cicadas are insects with no backbone or internal skeletons therefore they are not vertebrates.
Insects