All arthropods apart from most insects have wings.
The Insecta class of arthropods may have wings. Insects are the only arthropods (and the only invertebrate) to have flight capability; but not all insects have wings.
Anthropods (humans) do not have wings; not to be confused with phylum Arthropoda (arthropods). Many arthropods have wings (insects are arthropods, including flying insects), but, of course, not all of them.
Millipedes do not have wings. Amongst arthropods only Insects have wings.
The wings attach to the body segment in arthropods via a flexible membrane, containing a number of sclerites or hardened areas (plates), collectively known as the pteralia.
do female arthropods fly
All arthropods apart from most insects have wings.
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Spiders and scorpions are arthropods with neither antenna nor wings; they are members of subphylum Chelicerata.
No, centipedes do not have wings. They are arthropods with multiple jointed legs for movement, but they do not have wings for flying. They primarily rely on their legs to navigate their environment.
Centipedes do not have wings. They are elongated arthropods with many legs, typically found in dark, damp environments. Their anatomy is adapted for crawling rather than flying, and they rely on their speed and agility to evade predators.
Two sets fo wings (four total) and three sets of legs (six total). The prothorax carries legs, metathorax legs and wings, and meosthorax legs and wings. Not all adult insects have two sets of wings, but they all have six legs. Other arthropods have different parts all toghether.
Wings for powered flight have evolved multiple times in protostomes, with the best-known example being in insects. Other protostomes that have evolved wings for powered flight include some groups of arthropods, such as butterflies and dragonflies.