Sharks are the most obvious answer.
Most notably, the Chondrichthyes, or 'Cartilaginous Fishes', are the group of vertebrates whose members have a cartilaginous endoskeleton. Examples includes sharks and sting-rays.
Chondrichtyes, or sharks and rays. Literally 'cartilage fish'.
Birds. They need those hollow bones to be in the air. Without those etremely light bones, it would be like a penguin flapping wet wings.
All vertebrates have bony or cartilaginous skeletons.
All vertebrates have a backbone.
Invertebrates are animals that do not have a backbone.
Chondrichthyes and Petromyzontida have cartilaginous skeleton .
The animal kingdom is divided into two major groups vertebrates and invertebrates. Vertebrates have a backbone and invertebrates does not have a backbone.
Technically vertebrates are just a way of organising animals into groups rather than an animal in particular. Vertebrates are animals with a backbone, the opposite to invertebrates which don't have a backbone.
The 5 groups of vertebrates are fish,amphibians,mammals,reptiles and birds. Vertebrates are animals with a backbone.
vertbrates are classified into different groups cause they have backbone and spine of structures for each group
All of the amphibians are vertebrates because they have a backbone and the invertebrates do not have a backbone.
Vertebrate. They are mammals therefore they have a backbone.
Elks are vertebrates. An invertebrate has no backbone like a snail.
Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone. A vertebrate has a 'vertebra' - a backbone
well vertebrates are animals that have a backbone and invertebrates are animals that don't have a backbone
They have a backbone, making them vertebrates.
Yes, Pythons are vertebrates as they have a backbone.
vertebrates have a backbone invertebrates don't