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No, but squid do.
Nope, because coelenterate animals are stinging-celled animals and animals with tentacles and hollow body. Squid is not a stinging-celled animal, even if they have tentacles and hollow body. Squid is an example of a MOLLUSK, which are soft-bodied animals. ---Co0leTs24
No, they have no bones (neither does a shark - but it is a vertebrate). It lacks a back-bone (the equivalent is in front or below). A butterfly is an insect and most insects are classified as invertebrates. Butterflies have an exoskeleton, which is the outer covering of an insect.No, butterflies are invertebrates.No - butterflies have a soft body with no bones.
Butterflies have an exoskeleton. Ergo they're a hard invertebrate.
The genus Octopus defines the family of the Octopodidae and the members of the family are bottom-living cephalopods having a soft oval body with eight long tentacles.
They are soft
A squid
A south-east Asian tentacled cotton man-fish.
No, they have no bones (neither does a shark - but it is a vertebrate). It lacks a back-bone (the equivalent is in front or below). A butterfly is an insect and most insects are classified as invertebrates. Butterflies have an exoskeleton, which is the outer covering of an insect.No, butterflies are invertebrates.No - butterflies have a soft body with no bones.
An octopus has eight "arms" or tentacles to grasp things, a hard beak to crunch food with, a soft body to hide in tiny cracks, and a jet propulsion system to swim with.
The Great Barrier Reef is made up of both hard corals and soft corals. The term 'soft coral' is the name given to the coral group with the scientific name of Alcyonacea. They are different from hard coral polyps, which have multiples of six tentacles, by the fact that the soft coral polyps always have eight tentacles.
The Hink Pink is jelly belly.