Arthropoda
Kingdom Animalia; Phylum Arthropoda
No, butterflies are not in the Chordata phylum. Butterflies belong to the Arthropoda phylum, specifically the Insecta class. Chordata includes animals with a notochord or backbone, such as mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish.
Chordata is not something you "have." It is a way if classifying an animal. "Chordata" is a phylum in which vertebraes, urochodatas, and cephalochordates are put under (how they are classified). If your question was meant to be "are butterflies chordates" then the answer is no. Butterflies are classified under the phylum "Arthropoda," not under the phylum Chordata.
There are many animals that are not in the Mollusca phylum. Birds, starfish, butterflies, jellyfish, and worms are not part of the Mollusca phylum.
Butterflies belong to the Phyla or Phylum Arthropoda.
Crustaceans are part of the phylum arthropoda along with insects, centipedes, and spiders. Sea butterflies are class gastropoda of phylum Mollusca along with sails and slugs. Butterflies are insects.
Invertebrates. Butterflies are what is classified as an insect. Insects have no vertebrae; instead they have an exoskeleton.
No, snails and butterflies should not be placed in the same phylum. Snails belong to the phylum Mollusca, which includes soft-bodied animals often with shells, while butterflies are classified under the phylum Arthropoda, characterized by jointed limbs and exoskeletons. These two groups are fundamentally different in their body structure, reproductive methods, and evolutionary history. Thus, they occupy distinct taxonomic classifications.
Butterflies are more than a single species. Butterflies are a group of insects, containing multiple families, many genera, and many species. They are in the kingdom Animalia, the phylum Arthropoda, the class Insecta, and the order Lepidoptera.
Butterflies are more than a single species. Butterflies are a group of insects, containing multiple families, many genera, and many species. They are in the kingdom Animalia, the phylum Arthropoda, the class Insecta, and the order Lepidoptera.
Butterflies belong in the Phylum Arthropoda, Class Insecta, etc., whereas polar bears belong in Phylum Chordata, Class Mammalia. This means that butterflies, though animals, are not vertebrates nor are they mammals: they are invertebrates and thus insects.
Butterflies all fall under the phylum arthropoda. They are also a part of the insecta class and Animalia kingdom.