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A Woodlouse is actually classified as a crustacean. It's flexible, hard outer shell allows it to roll in a ball to protect itself against potential predators.
They don't if they can help it! If a woodlouse is on its back and does not respond to your touch it's probably dead...
A mouse can protect itself in several ways. One way it can protect itself is to fit into very small holes when escaping a predator.
Some wood lice can roll up into a ball to protect themselves.
The woodlouse are isopods assigned to the suborder Oniscidea. There are over 3000 known species known by such names as the "roly-poly", "armadillo bug", "cheeselog", "doodlebug", "monkeypea", "pill bug", "potato bug", "roll up bug", "slater", and "sow bug".The woodlouse is the only crustacean to occupy an inland habitat. Woodlouse body length is 11mm, which is rather small, never reaching more than three-quarters of an inch long, with oval shaped bodies, convex above, and empty beneath.The two most common European woodlouses are Oniscus asellis, which has a brown body and yellow marks on its back, and Porcellio scaber that has mix blue and grey body. Both are rather flat.
Well hyenas have the strongest pound for pound jaw in all of the Animal Kingdom, one bite of a hyenas can break an elaphants raw bone! thats one of the ways it can protect itself.
no, a woodlouse has an exo-skeleton
Well it isn't really name a woodlouse the scientific name for it is dregonmss
how do young protect itself
how does 'what' protect itself.
I don't know. It depends what breed of woodlouse it is. But I can tell you there are over 3,500 species of woodlouse!
A blackbrid can protect itself from danger by