Bumblebees are insects, and all insects are arthropods.
No, the conch is not an arthropod (phylum Arthropoda) but rather is a gastropod mollusc (phylum Mollusca) along with other sea snails, land snails, bivalves, etc. Aquatic arthropods include creatures like crabs, lobsters and shrimp.
No, it's the outside of a mollusc, such as a snail, slug or squid. Arthropods are animals such as insects, crustaceans and arachnids, with a hard exoskeleton as their outside covering.
An arthropod
No, snails are molluscs (phylum mollusca), different from phylum arthropoda (arthropods). Arthropods are characterized by segmented bodies, an exoskeleton made from chitin, and joint appendages. In the mollusc phylum, you will see members like the cephalopods including octopi, squid and cuttlefish; or gastropods like snails and slugs.
Nope - it's a member of the Jellyfish family, not an arthropod.
No, it is a Mollusc.
ants are anthropods
A snail is a mollusc, as are the octopus and oyster.
Animals that don't have a backbone (spine) - arthropod, mollusc, annelid, coelenterate are examples.
No, the conch is not an arthropod (phylum Arthropoda) but rather is a gastropod mollusc (phylum Mollusca) along with other sea snails, land snails, bivalves, etc. Aquatic arthropods include creatures like crabs, lobsters and shrimp.
No, it's the outside of a mollusc, such as a snail, slug or squid. Arthropods are animals such as insects, crustaceans and arachnids, with a hard exoskeleton as their outside covering.
I think the word you are looking for is 'arthropod', and yes, bees are arthropods -- as are all insects.
Yes. The phylum arthropoda includes the sub phylum insecta and a bumble bee is an insect
Yes. More specifically, they belong to the subgroup known as insects.
The bee is an insect and an arthropod, and all arthropods belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
No, a mollusc is a mollusc.
sand burrowing mollusc