yes
No. Snails and squid are invertebrates, specifically they are molluscs.
yes it is some other molluscs' are snails, slugs and squids
No. They do not. Some molluscs, like snails and slugs, live on land, and some, like squids and octopus, live in water.
No. Fish have back bones (like us). Squid are molluscs (like octopuses, snails, oysters, etc.)
Squids and snails are both mollusks, belonging to the phylum Mollusca. They both have a soft body and a muscular foot for movement. However, squids are cephalopods with a more streamlined body and tentacles, while snails have a coiled shell for protection.
I honestly can't say. Arthropods may have an exoskeleton while molluscs are squishy, they may be more diverse and numerous in species and individuals, but molluscs are pretty intricate on the inside as well (I've dissected squids and snails, they have much the same organs as us), and octopuses and squids are very intelligent. They can count, preform tasks in return for rewards and they require entertainment in aquaria or else they'll turn on the other inhabitants or even short-cirquit the lights by squirting water at them!
Squids Will Be Squids was created in 1998.
The ISBN of Squids Will Be Squids is 9780670881352.
what type of skin does molluscs
Squids Will Be Squids has 48 pages.
Molluscs are acoelomate; they have no body cavities.
Ok. Abalones clams and mussels are molluscs.If you notice the meaning of molluscs is any invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically having acalcareous shell of one, two, or more pieces that wholly or partlyenclose the soft, unsegmented body, including the chitons, snails,bivalves, squids, and octopuses.Now you know right?Well here is the picture of the............................................... Abalones clams mussels