Yes. As a rule of thumb; all animals are ectotherms except for mammals and birds.
They are invertebrates because they are an insect and all insects do not have a backbone. YUPPIE that is my answer boo ya
what insect has a V on its abdomen
Plume moth is an insect. It begins with the letters pl.
No, it doesn't have six legs or more so it can't possibly be an insect.
A tick
Reptiles (Lizards and Snakes) are ectotherms Amphibians are ectotherms
All mammals are endothermic (warm blooded). Ectotherms are cold blooded animals like snakes and lizards.
Ectotherms and poikilotherms are similar in that both rely on external environmental temperatures to regulate their body heat. Ectotherms, which include reptiles, amphibians, and many fish, do not generate significant internal heat and depend on their surroundings to maintain their body temperature. Poikilotherms, on the other hand, are organisms whose body temperature fluctuates with the ambient environment, which can include both ectotherms and some endotherms that can have variable body temperatures under certain conditions. Essentially, all ectotherms are poikilotherms, but not all poikilotherms are necessarily ectotherms.
No, a dolphin is a mammal and all mammals are endotherms.
Yes. Lancelets are fish and all fish are ectothermic.
Ectotherms their body temperature changes with the environment
Endotherms are warmblooded, ectotherms are coldblooded, so amphibians are ectotherms.
Ectotherms are cold-blooded animals, including insects, whose body temperature is controlled by their outside environment or surroundings. Ectotherms can release their heat or be affected by their environment. Although insects do not let a large amount of heat out to their environment, they let some out and they are affected by their environment, fitting all the criteria of an ectotherm.
ectotherms' body temperature change with surrounding climate. hence to avoid exposure to cool temperatures, they hibernate.
endothermic
They are endotherms
Endotherm.