external sexual reproduction
Most aquatic arthropods have external gills
Yes! They are.
Terrestrial plants include all plants that live and reproduce on the land. There are many terrestrial plants as well as many aquatic plants.
external fertilization
For a VERY basic answer if it gets hot enough (the typical temperature is 100 *C but this can change with altitude) it will turn into its gas state.
They lay an egg, and the egg hatches and is either a nymph or larva, then you should know what happens next!They reproduce sexually, and they reproduce asexually. In most terrestrial arthropods sexual reproduction is carried out internally. In most aquatic arthropods, sexual reproduction occurs externally.
Most aquatic arthropods have external gills
Arthropods reproduce sexually . Fertilization is mostly internal but in some species it is indirect . In most arthropods fertilization is direct . Most arthropods are oviparous i.e. they lay eggs . Metamorphosis takes place .
arthropods reproduce sexually
external sexual
It is Insecta.The largest group of arthropods are aquatic, so things like shrimp, lobster, (and the most popular) Crab.Crab is the largest group in the arthropods.
They lay eggs during the breeding season.
Copepods reproduce by spawning, like most aquatic animals. They do not need much light to reproduce, but need plenty algae to survive.
Butteflies are not arthropods, they are members of Insecta, in the group Lepidoptera. Arthropods have 8 legs, and Butterflies have 6.
No, not all. Remember some arthropods are aquatic; the spiracle/trachea/tracheole system utilized by terrestrial insects is largely replaced by gills in marine arthropods.
Aquatic arthropods mostly exchange gases through (c) gills; some (like the horseshoe crabs) have book gills. The "book lungs" term usually applies to most arachnids like scorpions and spiders, which are terrestrial; most other terrestrial arthropods exchange gases through special holes in their segments called spiracles, attached to the tracheal tubules/tracheola which connect directly to the tissues.
Oh, they're not. Crustaceans are arthropods too, and they're aquatic. Almost all insect species fly. They're everywhere.