No, a whale is not an invertebrate, it is a vertebrate because it has a backbone.
A whale is a vertebrate
a whale is a vertebrae because it has a backbone!:)
a whale is a vertebrae because it has a backbone!:)
a whale is a vertebrae because it has a backbone!:)
No, a whale is not an invertebrate, it is a vertebrate because it has a backbone.
A killer whale is considered a type of vertebrate. It is a type of mammal, and they are vertebrates with spines.
They are vertebrates. They are mammals and have a spinal column.
An adult grey whale is mainly a bottom feeding baleen whale. It strains out small invertebrates (amphibods, ghost shrimp, crab larvae) from the soft muddy bottom in shallow areas.
Does it have a backbone? It does, so that means its a vertebrate. Invertebrates are animals without a backbone. Hope that helps.
No. Invertebrates are animals with no spines (backbones) and whales do have spines. Whales are mammals, and all mammals have spines.
It could but it wouldn't. Squid feed on plankton, krill and other small invertebrates in the sea.
Mammal Species under NMFS Jurisdiction: Blue Whale, Bowhead Whale, Chinese River Dolphin, Fin Whale, Gray Whale, Gulf of CA harbor porpoise/vaquita, Humpback Whale, Indus River dolphin, Killer Whale, North Atlantic right Whale, North Pacific right Whale, Sei Whale, Southern right Whale, Sperm Whale, Caribbean fur Seal, Guadalupe Fur Seal, Hawaiian Monk Seal, Mediterranean Monk Seal, Saimaa Seal, Steller Sea Lion (Eastern and Western) This goes on to turtles, fish, and invertebrates, along with a list of candidates. If this is what you are asking about "gbr"?