no
Lobsters in the wild are generally mottled yellow, green, brown, and almost never red. The reason they turn red during cooking is that other pigmentations are broken down by heat, but the red pigments are not.
Yes, arthropods are organisms, like all other living things.
Hornets with their jointed limbs and chitinous exoskeletons are most definitely arthropods, under Arthropoda's subphylum Hexapoda, along with all other insects.
No, bunnies have a backbone (spine) and are chordates (phylum Chordata) along with other mammals, lizards, birds, amphibians, etc. To be an arthropod (phylum Arthropoda) you'd need to have an external skeleton (exoskeleon) made from chitin.
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.
The largest variety of species is in the insect family. The number of insect species outnumber all other families of species combined.
Yes, with over a million known species an probably countless more undiscovered, arthropds outnumber all other animal phylums combined.
Yes. As a multicellular, eukaryotic organism which is in the Kingdom Animalia, a tick is considered an animal. Specifically, it is a member of the phylum Arthropoda, which a classified within the animal kingdom.
It's a forest composed of plantations of trees from the same species or combined with other species.
It's a forest composed of plantations of trees from the same species or combined with other species.
Plankton
There is no "co-animal" for the Tasmanian devil. It is a solitary species that does not interact with other species, except to hunt and eat them.
Yes, when a wolf hunts they kill an animal of another species.
A lack of genetic variability in the species :)
No, just the opposite, there are more arthropod species than any other phylum. Most of these are insects at over a million species defined (around half of which might be beetles), but biologists estimate millions more have yet to be described.
No. A frog is not an arthropod. It's an amphibian. Arthropods are insects, spiders, and other animals with exoskeletons.
A lack of genetic variability in the species #2