It is an invertebrate
Dragonflies are in the phylum arthropoda, and within that they are nested into Hexapoda, and then further into the Insecta group, where they can be found within the infraorder Anisoptera.
They are invertebrates. All insects are invertebrates. (P.S. 'Invertebrate' or 'Vertebrate' is spelled with an 'e' not an 'i' ^_^)
No, a dragonfly is not a vertebrate; it is an invertebrate. Dragonflies belong to the class Insecta, which means they do not have a backbone. Instead, they have an exoskeleton and are characterized by their two pairs of wings and long bodies.
yes
invertebrate - has exoskeleton
An invertebrate.
Dragonflies are invertebrates
The ancestors to the dragonflies was the Protondonata. These were the 1st winged insects on Earth and the earliest form of dragonflies.
A Fetch of dragonflies.
A swarm of dragonflies.
Dragonflies are real but dragons are not.
No dragonflies eat bugs and mosquitoes.