i think they juzz move around lik thatt woow right u noe pepz i probably be dumbb butt if ya got dha answer hurry up and right it downn
it does move
No, tigers are chordates - phylum Chordata, a different phylum than Arthropoda (the arthropods). Pretty much anything with an internal skeleton and backbone like mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, will be chordates. Arthropods have their skeleton on the outside (exoskeleton), like the insects or crustaceans.
the hot magma moves around and they move.
Phylum arthropoda is characterized by their exoskeleton, or "wearing" the anatomical compoent providing structure on the outside; whereas chordates usually have an internal skeleton or at least a notochord. Chordates like fish, birds, amphibians, reptiles, mammals are recognizable by having some kind of spinal column. (Chordates without a formal backbone still would not have an exoskeleton like the arthropods). Chemical differences are also apparent, the bulk of arthropod skeletons are made from proteins including the tough long-chain polymer chitin, whereas chordates usually employ bones made from mineral compounds like those of calcium and phosphorus.
Rovers
all vertebrates are chordates because vertebrates are the sub- group of phylum chordates and also it follow one of the important feature of the chordates i.e. presence of notochord whereas all chordates are not vertebrates because some chordates are cephalochordates, urochordates.
There isn't a "popular name" for them. The most familiar chordates are the vertebrates, but not all chordates are vertebrates (tunicates, for example, are chordates).
Chordates are not vertebrates because although some vertebrates are chordates theres many reasons why chordates arent vertebrates.the first reason is because chordates consist of a notochord or a dorsal nerve.
Chordates are animals with vertebrates.
Chordates are a group of animals which include vertebrates (animals having a spinal column), so yes, birds are chordates.
Yes, hemichordates are not chordates as they are their own phylum.
Chordates such as the sea squirts and lancelets do not have a backbone that is why they are called vertebrate chordates.
Yes, chordates have true coeloms. Coeloms are fluid-filled cavities that are completely lined by mesoderm, providing space for internal organs to move and function independently of body wall movement. Chordates, including vertebrates like mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish, possess coeloms that are derived from mesoderm during development.
look in the wikipedia
humans, chordates are anything with a spine.
Lancelets are considered true chordates because they possess a notochord, dorsal nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, and a post-anal tail at some stage in their life cycle, which are characteristic features of chordates. They are believed to represent an early evolutionary stage of the chordates.
Some of these non-chordates are marine animals. These animals are without a backbone. Some of these animals are... Fish Coral Sea-Aneamone