Yes, they don't have a bony skeleton. Their hard outer casing is called an exoskeleton and gives the body its shape.
no an exampl of an exoskeleton is a bug because the have no bones but they have a hard outer shell
Lizards are not bony or cartilaginous fish, they are reptiles.
Yes they have a backbone
An Exoskeleton. They don't have an exoskeleton. Those spines are an addition, not armor.
An Exoskeleton. They don't have an exoskeleton. Those spines are an addition, not armor.
No, bees -- like all insects -- do not have a bony skeleton, so no backbone. They have a hard outer casing called an exoskeleton which gives them their body shape.
exoskeleton
Yes. Bees, like all insects, do not have a bony skeleton -- so no vertebrae. They have a hard outer casing called an exoskeleton which gives the body its shape.
A bee is an insect. The type of invertebrate it is is an arthropod.
Bees, like all other insects, do not have a bony skeleton. A bee's outer casing is its exoskeleton, and it is composed mainly of substance called chitin, a hard, horn-like material.
When an insect sheds its outer skin, it's called molting.