Ladybirds are insects; all insects have an external skeleton without a backbone.
a ladybird is a invertebrate as it has no backbone.
Animals without backbone are invertebrates, because vertebra means backbone.
No, but they have exoskeletons.
The smartest animal without a backbone will have to be an octopus
Lewis Kenna
Invertebrate animals are amimals without a backbone.
An invertebrate. Anything without a backbone is an invertebrate.
if youre into spiders, bugs or snails they have no backbone
No, there are many more animals without backbones than there are those that have backbones.
A Ladybird does not kill
"Ladybird" is a dialect variant of "ladybug." Both mean "Our Lady's bug/bird" and are one of the standard examples of a modern derivative of Old English feminine nouns without -s in the possessive. Presumably, then, a baby ladybird would be a larva or a pupa.
Insects are the only creatures without backbones. The rest of the other animals in other animal classification all have a backbone.