well arachnids all have eight legs and can't have wings
There's no such thing as an insect member of the arachnid family. Neither is there such a thing as an arachnid family. The term 'insect' refers to a higher category within scientific classification. Its category is as the Insecta class of which bugs and insects are members. The term 'arachnid' also refers to a higher category than family. That category is the Arachnida class of which water boatmen, ticks, Spiders, scorpions, mites, and harvesters are members.
There is no difference between arachnids and spiders because spiders are arachnids.
Spiders are in "Phylum" (Arthopoda) because they have segmented body parts, jointed appendages and an exoskeleton. Spiders are in the "Class" (Arachnid).
All spiders are arachnids but not all arachnids are spiders. Spiders belong to the class Arachnida (you know, arachnids), along with scorpions, daddy long-legs, and mites and ticks.
Their jointed feet.
well arachnids all have eight legs and can't have wings
Arachnid.
is a snail an arachnid
yes, arachnid
A butterfly is not an arachnid
a spider is an arachnid.
Arachnid
arachnids is correct.
Arachnids generally share the following traits: eight legs, two body segments, no antenna or wings, have a chelicerae and pedipaips. There are a few species of mites that have all of the above except for eight legs.
No. arachnid is another word for spider.
Yes, arachnid exoskeletons are made out of chitin.
A scorpion is an arthropod - sub species arachnid.