Arachnids
They do, yes. They share a kingdom, phylum and class.
no, the scorpions have their own way. so does the spiders.. so don't think that!
Scorpions are classified as arthropods within the class of Arachnida which means they are technically spiders. With almost 1800 different species, scorpions inhabit every continent except Antarctica.
I don't think that any animal, as in mammal, have eight legs, but spiders do, though I don't think spiders are considered an animal, though I'm not an expert. The spider has eight legs and is considered an arachnid.
Spiders belong to the class of bugs called arachnids. Scorpions are also a part of the arachnid family. Arachnids are creatures that have two body segments, and eight eggs. Spiders, as well as other arachnids are not able to chew.
The correct spelling is arachnids, a class of arthropods that includes spiders and scorpions.
Neither, ticks are Arachnids, a class which includes Spiders, Mites and Scorpions.
Dust mites are arachnids, the class of arthropods which includes spiders, scorpions and ticks.
Arachnids are a species of eight legged, joint-legged invertebrate animals. The class includes spiders and many different species of scorpions.
The word Arachnid is from the Greek word for spider. However this class includes mites, ticks, harvestmen and scorpions, not just spiders.
They do, yes. They share a kingdom, phylum and class.
The word you are likely seeking is "arachnid", from the spider's taxonomic class Arachnida, which actually includes scorpions and mites.
The scorpion's class is Arachnids. By the looks from its eight legs, its related to the spiders, ticks, mites, and harvestmen.
no, the scorpions have their own way. so does the spiders.. so don't think that!
Chelicerates, being spiders, scorpions, harvestmen, ticks, mites, sun/camel spiders, horseshoe crabs and some others. ^^
Scorpions are a part of a class called "arachnida." They generally have 4 sets of legs, no antennae or wings, and various other characteristics. Scorpions belong to this class just like spiders and ticks and feature exoskeletons (members of the phylum Arthropoda)
A Wolf Spider is in the class Arachnida (spiders and scorpions)Its family name is Lycosidae, which is in the Superfamily of Lycosoidea, and of the Order Araneae.