No, earthworms belong to phylum Annelida, or the annelids, which are worms with a round cross-section. By contrast, Arthropods (phylum Arthropoda) are characterized by jointed appendages and have bodies covered with a hard shell or coating like insects and crustaceans.
Snails aren't arthropods, they're mollusks. They have the head foot, a muscular foot, and a shell. They don't have the characteristics of an arthropod (segmented body and jointed appendages).
No, gastropods like snails and slugs are in phylum Mollusca (molluscs), different from phylum Arthropoda (the arthropods).
No an Arthropod is most certainly not a Cnidarian.
No, nematodes have their very own phylum Nematoda, with different characteristics from Arthropoda.
No, snails belong to the gastropod class under phylum Mollusca (molluscs). Arthropoda are a different phylum and characterized by joint appendages, like insects and crustaceans.
No, a snail is a Mollusk (or a Mollusc).
No, snails are molluscs (phylum mollusca), different from phylum arthropoda (arthropods). Arthropods are characterized by segmented bodies, an exoskeleton made from chitin, and joint appendages. In the mollusc phylum, you will see members like the cephalopods including octopi, squid and cuttlefish; or gastropods like snails and slugs.
No, the siphonophore belongs to a different phylum - cnidaria, along with jellyfish; the chiton is a mollusc, phylum molluscae along with snails and bivalves.
No, the conch is not an arthropod (phylum Arthropoda) but rather is a gastropod mollusc (phylum Mollusca) along with other sea snails, land snails, bivalves, etc. Aquatic arthropods include creatures like crabs, lobsters and shrimp.
no, i dont know what they are, but they are not arthropods
NO. Arthropods do not have a 4 chambered hearts.
Snails aren't arthropods, they're molluscs. Other phylum.
Snails are gastropods, and are not even related to insects (which are arthropods).
They are invertabrates. Some person on this site said that they are arthropods, but he/she is definetly wrong. They are closely related on the phylum tree, but they aren't exactly arthropods. They are invertabrates. Ps. arthropods are a type of invertabrate. :)
No they aren't, they sometimes attack earthworms, ants, snails, shellfish and many other arthropods.
Snails like the assassin snails will eat any aquatic insect slow enough for them to catch. Normal herbivorous snails will inadvertently eat microscopic insects and arthropods when grazing.
No. They are not even related to one another. Snails are gastropods, which are a type of mollusk. Insects are arthropods.
No, snails are molluscs (phylum mollusca), different from phylum arthropoda (arthropods). Arthropods are characterized by segmented bodies, an exoskeleton made from chitin, and joint appendages. In the mollusc phylum, you will see members like the cephalopods including octopi, squid and cuttlefish; or gastropods like snails and slugs.
No. Slugs are part of the phylum Mollusca (family Gastropoda), which isn't even a closely related. Other members of the mollusk phylum include octopi, squids, clams, oysters, slugs, snails, etc. Arachnids (phylum Arthropoda, family arachnida) include spiders, scorpions, vinegaroons/tail less whip scorpions, pseudo scorpions, and mites/ticks.
well all i know is fish, snakes, worms, frogs/toads, arthropods, leeches, snails, mussels, loons
Crayfish and shrimp (Arthropods), Dolphins (Cetaceans), Eels (Anguilliformes), Fish (Agnatha, Chrondrichthyes, and Osteichthyes), Fly larvae (Insects/Arthropods), Hydroids (Actiniaria), Snails (Mollusks), Water mites (Arachnids/Arthropods), Worms (Oligochaetes), Worms (Nemetodes).
No, the siphonophore belongs to a different phylum - cnidaria, along with jellyfish; the chiton is a mollusc, phylum molluscae along with snails and bivalves.
There are many different examples of insects and animals with an exoskeleton. Like ants, bees, and snails.