an exoskeleton maybe like all insects
to better understand dragonflies, you have to know that biologist clasify the world into five kingdoms, namely: Prokaryot, Monera,eukaryotic Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia. The last one Animalia is where the dragonfly comes from. Then it subdives into arthropods (one of the subdivisions) and the again it subdives into insects Insects form the largest single group in the animal Kingdom and can be defined as creatures whose bodies have three sections: head, thorax and abdomen, the central one (thorax) bearing three pairs of legs and, in most cases, two pairs of wings. One of the Orders within Insecta is Odonata - and these are our dragonflies!
Because they have a head, thorax, and adbomen, they are considered to have an exoskeleton, meaning their skeleton is on the outside rather than the inside of their bodies.
there you go !!
For more info, look up the five kindgoms, you will be amazed at what you find.
P.S. I teach science !
Yes they do other wise they would look like Jelly Fish! With out a Skeleton they would be putty! Yes, if they didnt have a skeleton, how can they jump?
Bees are invertebrates, so do not have a bony skeleton. Their hard outer casing gives the body its shape and is called an exoskeleton.
yes, they so have skeletons!
A bee is an insect. The type of invertebrate it is is an arthropod.
A honey bee's sting is barbed, rather like a fishing hook, and when the bee stings into animal (including human) flesh, the elastic skin closes around the sting preventing the bee from withdrawing it. When the bee pulls away the sting is left behind, together with the venom sac and the muscles that pump the venom. This causes severe injury to the bee, which dies from those injuries. This is a bit of a cruel trick of evolution because insect stings really evolved to sting other insects. An insect's hard outer casing is its skeleton (called an exoskeleton) and when the bee stings another insect its sting creates a hole which doesn't close up so the bee can withdraw the sting with no problem and lives to sting again. It is possible to be stung by a bee where maybe it doesn't penetrate fully and the bee is able to withdraw the sting. If this happens no harm comes to the bee.
it is animals skeleton
The feminine of a bee is a worker bee. A male bee is a drone. All hives have one queen bee in charge.
Bumble bee.
no
23
it looks the shape of are body
Nope... it's an insect. It has no internal skeleton.
The smallest calcerous skeleton is likely from diatoms...the smallest vertibrate skeleton is from the bumble-bee bat. Exoskeleton the fairyfly.
Because it has a rackin bod to keep it dandy
Yes. Bumblebees have exoskeletons as do all arthropods.
A bee is an insect. The type of invertebrate it is is an arthropod.
you cant become skeleton Mario you only become: fire Mario, ice Mario, boo Mario, and bee Mario.
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.
no, bumble bees and lobster are invertibrates, which means no vertabre. they have an exo skeleton though which protscts their internal organs
No, bees, like all insects are invertebrates, which means they don't have a bony skeleton.