The exoskeleton acts like body armor and protects the body from harm but only a few animals have an exoskeleton and most of them are insects or bugs.
exoskeleton
I think an ant has a exoskeleton.
An animal (insect) with an exoskeleton still grows under its exoskeleton like any other animal (insect). The exoskeleton is like a suit of armor, when the animal (insect) grows to big to fit inside its exoskeleton it sheds it, and a newer exoskeleton will grow to fit the animal (insect).
A bumblebee is an insect, which is a member of the Phylum Arthropoda. One of the defining characteristics of an arthropod is its exoskeleton.
No, they don't.
protection for the soft tissue
they have exoskeleton
False the exoskeleton has many other purposes like protecting the body, and helping the structure.
Yes; many cnidarians have an exoskeleton.
A butterfly has an exoskeleton. The exoskeleton appears when the caterpillar undergoes the metamorphosis process. It is the pup that dissolves and becomes the exoskeleton.
An exoskeleton.
The bodies of arthropods are supported by a hardened exoskeleton made of chitin, a substance produced by many non-arthropods as well. In arthropods, the nonliving exoskeleton is like a form-fitting suit of armor.
Exoskeleton is a noun.
No, an angelfish does not have an exoskeleton.
The Exoskeleton
Yes, corals are composed of an exoskeleton
exoskeleton.