Hornets with their jointed limbs and chitinous exoskeletons are most definitely arthropods, under Arthropoda's subphylum Hexapoda, along with all other insects.
No an arthropod is an invertebrate with external skeleton.
Yes.
insect
An arthropod
Nope - it's a member of the Jellyfish family, not an arthropod.
none
Barnacles
although an octopus has eight arms or tantacles
A spider! Spiders have 4 pairs of legs (8 total), and a body divided into two segments.Further information: A spider belongs to the group, arthropod. An arthropod is an invertebrate animal having an exoskeleton (external skeleton), a segmented body, and jointed appendages.
An arthropod
Vectors of the arthropod.
As the arthropod grows up, the exoskeleton sheds in order for the arthropod to grow inside of it.
arthropod
yes a beetle is an arthropod
The Blowjob arthropod family
A crab is an arthropod.
A wasp causes a wasp sting
Yes, a moth is considered to be an arthropod.
a mit is a arthropod because it has no back bone
Yes - there are many types of wasps in California including: German yellowjacket, western yellowjacket, California yellowjacket, paper wasp, mud dauber, fig wasp, Western sand wasp, square headed wasp, bee wolf, Pacific burrowing wasp, gall wasp, soldier wasp, club horned wasp, burrowing wasp, blue mud wasp, cutworm wasp, thread-waisted wasp, mason wasp, potter wasp, and pollen wasp. Obviously this is not a complete list - just scratching the surface really - but it does demonstrate that California has plenty of wasps.