yes
The average dog has 26 vertebrae. 7 cervical, 13 thoracic, and 6 lumbar. Some breeds such as the English Bulldog may frequently have a 7th lumbar vertebra, or a portion of a vertebra called a transitional vertebra.
There are 5 different portions of the vertebra starting from top to bottom: 7 Cervical Vertebra 12 Thoracic Vertebra 5 Lumbar Vertebra 5 Sacral Vertebra 4 Coccygeal Vertebra
Bottle nosed dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) have 60-65 total vertebra (7 cervical vertebra, 13 thorasic, 14 lumbar, 0 sacral, and 26 caudal) in their spinal column. The first two vertebra (axis and atlas) are fussed.
24 There are typically 7 neck vertebrae, 12 thoracic and 5 lumbar vertebrae. A few percent of folks have one more or one less due to fusion or a lumbar vertebra with the Sacrum or non union of the normally fused 5 sacral segments. Others have fused vertebra elsewhere in the spine.
7 cervical, 13 thoracic, 7 lumbar, 3 sacral, 20-23coccygeal
the nerve cord is enclosed while a invertabrae nerve is opened
There are 33 vertebrae in the spinal cord of a human being. They are broadly categorized into 5 areas. They are called the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacrum & coccyx vertebra. The upper 3 areas have a total of 24 vertebrae, which includes 7 cervical vertebrae, 12 thoracic vertebrae & 5 lumbar vertebrae. Sometimes the lumbar region, may have an additional vertebra, it does happen - but it is rare. 5 vertebrae are fused together to form the sacrum & 3 vertebrae form the end of the spinal column which is the coccyx.
There are typically 33 vertebrae in the human spine: 7 cervical vertebrae, 12 thoracic vertebrae, 5 lumbar vertebrae, 5 sacral vertebrae (fused into the sacrum), and 4 coccygeal vertebrae (fused into the coccyx).
9
A dog's spine typically has around 35 vertebrae, which are the bones that make up the backbone. Each vertebra is connected to the next by joints and cushioned by intervertebral discs. The spine is divided into different regions, including the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral, and tail vertebrae.
They are the names of specific vertebrae in the spine. The anatomy of the spine is sectioned for better identification and specificity. There is the neck area, the cervical spine; the main upper part of the back is the thoracic spine; the area at the "small of the back" is the lumbar spine; the part below that is the Sacral spine (also called the sacrum) which is five fused together vertebrae; and then finally the tailbone is called the coccyx and is actually four fused vertebrae. Each of the vertebra in a section is numbered. There are normally 33 vertebrae in humans (counting the fused ones). There are 7 in the cervical area, 12 in the thoracic area, 5 in the lumbar area, and the 9 making up the sacrum and coccyx. So L5 is the fifth Lumbar vertebra (counting from the top down). It is also the most common vertebra involved in lumbar disorders and low back pain. It is the last of the lumbar vertebrae. L4 is in the general area of the waist or at the highest point of the pelvic bones. So just down from there is L5 and S1 is the next one down.
It is possible a male dog is fertile at 7 months, although this is very young to be deliberately breeding a dog.