yes it is
invertebrate
Yes
Yes
The leech (phylum Annelida, of the subclass Hirudinea) is a blood-sucking segmented worm. It is an invertebrate as it does not have a spine.
No, a leech is not a crustacean. Leeches belong to the Annelida phylum, while crustaceans belong to the Crustacea subphylum. Leeches are more closely related to earthworms and other segmented worms.
Plain and simple... No. What they do have is 34 segments that make up its entire invertebrate body... Did you know that a leech can suck up 3x there weight in blood!
Leeches belong to the phylum Annelida (ringworms), like the common earthworm! They are very similar, they have the same bodyplan, rings and bristles.
The genus of a leech is Haemopis.
leech = βδέλλα bdella leech= βδέλλα bdella
invertebrate - has exoskeleton
An invertebrate.
No, a leech is not an insect. Leeches belong to the phylum Annelida, while insects belong to the phylum Arthropoda. Leeches are invertebrates that are more closely related to earthworms than to insects.