No
There is only one situation when a butterfly has a coiled shell. This is when the butterfly has died and its internals are dried up. The shell then covers the dead insides.
It's body is not soft, it has an exo-skeleton
A butterfly is an invertebrate, and doesn't have an internal skeleton. It has an exoskeleton (hard body covering).
They use internal fertilisation.
The function of a shell is to protect an organism's internal organs.
REPTILESbirdsbats
No, a butterfly does not have a coiled shell. Butterflies are insects with a soft body and an exoskeleton, but they do not possess a shell like mollusks such as snails or clams. Instead, butterflies have wings covered in scales and undergo metamorphosis, transitioning from larva to pupa before becoming an adult.
Of sorts, they have what's called an exoskeleton, and it's made of sugars and proteins, not the same stuff that makes shells such as egg shells or the shells of molluscs.
gladius
the pen
The pen
yes