Yes, dragonflies are insects, and thus invertebrates.
Dragonflies are invertebrates
They are invertebrates. All insects are invertebrates. (P.S. 'Invertebrate' or 'Vertebrate' is spelled with an 'e' not an 'i' ^_^)
Young dragonflies, called naiads, are flightless and aquatic. They feed on aquatic invertebrates, with the larger naiads occasionally eating small fish and tadpoles.
A dragonfly is not a vertebrate at all. Dragonflies are insects which are classified as invertebrates.
Spiders and insects such as dragonflies and butterflies.
Several invertebrates are native to Florida. Five of those invertebrates native to Florida are jellyfish, snails, Christmas tree worms, dragonflies, and sponges.
Macro invertebrates are organisms with no backbone or spine that can be seen without the use of microscope. The best examples are flatworms, crayfish, snails, clams and dragonflies.
Yes. All winged invertebrates are insects (winged vertebrates are just bats and birds). If it has no wings, but six legs nonetheless, you can be pretty sure too.
yes
They eat smaller bugs that are pests to us. I heard they eat mosquitoes.They eat mosquitos.
Birds, insects, and bats are the only animals that can fly.
The ancestors to the dragonflies was the Protondonata. These were the 1st winged insects on Earth and the earliest form of dragonflies.