Yes but they have a outer covering that may or may not be soft
No, soft-bodied animals do not have backbones. Soft-bodied animals typically lack a rigid internal skeleton like a backbone and instead have a more flexible body structure. Examples of soft-bodied animals include jellyfish, worms, and slugs.
yes, but only sea cucumber
Termite tunnels look very similar to the tunnels of ants seen in ant farms. This is because both insects have similar tunneling methods.
we can open our mouths
Soft-bodied animals are those that lack a hard external skeleton or shell for support and protection. This includes animals such as jellyfish, sea slugs, worms, and octopuses. They may have soft, flexible bodies that allow for movement and flexibility.
Mollusks are animals like snail squid clam cuttlefish lamp shell oyster, they are soft bodied and sometimes hard shelled animals.
Late in Precambrian time
They all possess a soft portion of their body known as the visceral mass.
Soft bodied animals that usually have a shell include clams, oysters, and mussels. Some others are squid, octopus, and crustaceans.
Mollusks are soft bodied animals which are classified as invertebrates. Some of these animals which are native to Canada include the Banff Springs snail, the California mussel, the helisoma anceps, the quadrula the Rocky Mountain capshell, and vertigo arthuri.
Mollusks are soft bodied animals that can have no shells,1 shell or even 2 shells. Snails, clams, sea slugs, clams, scallops, oysters, octopuses, and squid, are some types of Mollusks.
Worms Slugs Jellyfish Octopuses Squid Cuttlefish Sea cucumbers Sea anemones Nudibranchs Tardigrades Velvet worms Caterpillars Plankton Sea slugs Leeches Sea stars Sea urchins Mollusks Sea sponges Earthworms