Essentially the same as that in any other vertebrate - including us. It is the central column of the skeleton, and the conduit for the nerve-bundle that is the spinal cord.
Yes hummingbirds do have a backbone.
Insects do not have a backbone, they have an exoskeleton. Most insects have wings. Therefore insects have no backbone, but they do have wings.
Katydids are insects and have an exoskeleton. They do not have a backbone.
An animal with a backbone is called a vertibrate.
Puffins do have a backbone.
The function of a backbone in fish is to house and protect the spinal cord. It is the primary structural framework upon which the fish's body is built.
Structural integrity of Dna's backbone.
Provide structure and strength for locomotion and protection for the notochord/spinal cord.
the back bone is stright, therefore, is grows to keep you growing stright
Functional groups are such atoms.
Almost all vertebrates have a spleen. This means they have a "backbone". The function of the spleen is to filter the blood and to act as a reserve in case of heavy bleeding.
Yes, rattlesnakes are reptiles and vertebrates and do indeed have back bones.
Almost all vertebrates have a spleen. This means they have a "backbone". The function of the spleen is to filter the blood and to act as a reserve in case of heavy bleeding.
Yes they do!Yes, they have a backbone.
cytoskeleten provide the skeletol function in the cell, and it composes from intermediat filament, actin filament and microtubule. It provides the structural backbone and movement of the cell
Dioxyribose is the complex sugar backbone of DNA which bonds to a nucleotide bases (adenine, cytosine, thymine and guanine), there is then a phosphate group attached to the side of the dioxyribose. The molecule is basically the backbone of the whole DNA molecule. enjoy trying to understand :P
no bees are invertabrates that means they have no backbone