Earthworm
yes because they where living things
Invertebrates is the term for multicellular organisms that lack a backbone.
vertibrates (living things WITH a backbone) invertibrates (living things WITHOUT a backbone) The above answer is not quite broad enough, as the question is "all living things" and this only separates animals. prokaryotes and eukaryotes if I remember correctly. It depends on if the cells have a specific organelle, the nucleus, that contains the genetic information.
It's backbone of all living things
Living things without a backbone are classified as invertebrates. This group includes a wide range of organisms such as insects, worms, jellyfish, and mollusks. Invertebrates make up the majority of animal species on Earth.
a vertebrate is a living organism with a backbone and an invertebrate is a living organism without a backbone
According to their common traits.The main division is into the 2 categories: vertebrates (with backbone) and invertebrates (without backbone).Vertebrates can be sub-divided into 5 groups: Fish, Reptiles, Amphibians, Birds and Mammals.Livings things are classified into:DomainKingdomPhylumClassOrderFamilyGenusSpecies
both invertebrates and vertebrates are animals.
Yes, the backbones of the DNA molecule are identical in all living things. The backbone consists of alternating sugar (deoxyribose) and phosphate groups, which are the same across all organisms. However, the sequences of the nitrogenous bases (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine) that attach to this backbone vary, providing the unique genetic information for each species.
An invertebrate is a living organism without a backbone. A vertebrate is a living organism with one. Our (human's) backbones are called the spine. Tortoises have a backbone, so they are vertebrates.
A living organism with a segmented backbone is a vertebrate.
The biological carbon backbone chain needs side chains and side units for completion, hydrogen is the most common side unit.