Slugs are gastropods. All slugs are shell-less.
A gastropod can be a sea snail to a sea slug but all have either one shell or no shell at all. they are also the largest group of mollusks. The can live nearly anywhere on earth.
Bivalves, univalves, and cephalopods are all types of mollusks. So are gastropods.
bivalves gastropods cephalopods
Belly-footed is a term used to describe a gastropod mollusk. Gastropods appear to crawl along on their bellies, though their actual stomach is higher, protected by their shell. Examples of gastropods are the snail, slug, periwinkle and conch.
Belly-footed is a term used to describe a gastropod mollusk. Gastropods appear to crawl along on their bellies, though their actual stomach is higher, protected by their shell. Examples of gastropods are the snail, slug, periwinkle and conch.
Mollusca
Yes, it is a mollusk because mollusks are squid or octopus-like creatures. Mollusks have a variety of ways to create a shell. Some mollusks have shells on the outside, such as a variety of gastropods. The Nautilus is one of the first cephalopods, which traditionally do not have an exoskeleton shell, which does have an outer shell covering.
Clams are bivalves
Cephalopods
Yes, a gastropod is an invertebrate. The reason I know this is because snails and worms are classified as gastropods. They are vertebrates with exoskeletons as well.
Yes, all mammals, reptiles, avians, amphibians, insects, arachnids, crustaceans, piscines, gastropods, cephalopods, annelids, etc. are all animals.
Of the 100,000 different species of mollusk, a good many of them do, but some don't. Mollusca also includes the squid, the octopus and the slug. The first two have an internal structure that might be called an "internal shell" or the like. It should be noted that they completely decompose leaving only their beak. Slugs don't have shells or "hard" internal structures of any kind. A link can be found below to review the different creatures that are members of this phylum.