head, thorax, and abdomen, although the head and thorax can be joined to form a cephalothorax.
The Arachnid class of arthropods under subphylum Chelicerata have only two major body sections (tagmata) called the cephalothorax and abdomen; they also usually have eight legs as adults, and no wings nor antennae.
Invertebrateexoskeletonsegmented body
A typical arthropod, such as an ant, has three body sections - head, thorax and abdomen.However, the phylum "arthropoda" which literally translates to "jointed foot" (or, by extension, "jointed leg") includes more than a million species, some of which (the lobster, for instance) have as many as eight body sections, and others such as the arachnids (spiders), only two.For a basic science test, 3 is probably the answer.
Do arthropods have backbones?No, it is the exoskeleton that holds the arthropod's body together. arthropods are invertebrates, which means they do not have backbones.
I was learning about this in school and these are some characteristics # have an exoskeleton # have 6 legs # most have wings # body is divided into 3 sections: head, thorax,abdomen. Hope that helps!
i do not know Luckily, I do! No they are NOT. These are two distinct groups of invertebrates. Insects have 3 pairs or 6 legs while an arthropod will have 5 pairs of legs :) In addition, insects have three body sections while arthropods have only two. There are more contrasts, but this should do for now.
A crustacean is an arthropod that has two or three body sections, five or more pairs of legs, and two pairs of antennae. Arachnids are arthropods with two body sections, four pairs of legs, and no antennae. Arachnids are arthropods with two body sections, four pairs of legs, and no antennae.
arachnids are arthropods, two body sections, four pairs of legs, and don't have antennaeexample's:spidersmitesticksscorpions
body segments
Yes. Arthropods (from the Greek meaning jointed legs) have jointed legs, a body divided into several sections and an exoskeleton. Arthropods are animals of the Phylum Arthropoda, which includes insects, arachnids, myriapods (centipedes and millipedes), springtails, bristletails and crustaceans. Insects have jointed legs and a body divided into three parts (head, thorax and abdomen) and an exoskeleton. Thus they are arthropods.
The Arachnid class of arthropods under subphylum Chelicerata have only two major body sections (tagmata) called the cephalothorax and abdomen; they also usually have eight legs as adults, and no wings nor antennae.
Arthropods are divided into three subphyla: Chelicerata, Myriapoda, and Pancrustacea (which includes Crustacea and Hexapoda). Each subphylum represents a distinct group of arthropods with specific characteristics and differences in body structure and function.
Arthropods are distinguished from other animals by segmentation, meaning their bodies are divided into distinct parts. Insects have three body regions: head, thorax, abdomen. Arachnids have just two body regions: cephalothorax, abdomen.Elexus M. Sandoval.
no dragon fly donot have three sections like butterfly
Three
Head, Thorax, And Abdomen
Head, Thorax, And Abdomen