Branchiopods appear to be entirely aquatic although some live in fresh and some in salt water. The arthropod subphylum Crustacea is rich with aquatic organisms, and the subphylum most prone to have mostly aquatic classes. The classes include Branchiopoda, Remipedia, Cephalocarida, Maxillopoda, Ostracoda and Malacostraca. Many of these will have non-aquatic exceptional species in their classification. The Cephalocarida for example are benthic but found in the intertidal zone. Malacostraca with the lobsters, crabs, shrimp etc. are mostly aquatic but again will evidence exceptions like the terrestrial woodlice. Ostracoda are again mostly aquatic, but have exceptions living on moist forest soil, etc.
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.
An arthropod
For Most Complexity Comparison you need a Base. Most in what category ?Arthropod is a Phylum so I will consider it to be asked in complexity based on Phylum Categories.No, it is not.Out of 9 Phyla it is actually at 7th number. Where 9th is most complex and 1 is least.
Hornets with their jointed limbs and chitinous exoskeletons are most definitely arthropods, under Arthropoda's subphylum Hexapoda, along with all other insects.
Nope - it's a member of the Jellyfish family, not an arthropod.
No. They are in the arthropod class. (Invertabrate)
Tracheal tubes are used by most terrestrial arthropodsBook lungs are used by spiders and othersFeatherlike gills are used by most aquatic arthropodsBook gills are used by Horseshoe crabs
An arthropod of the class Arachnida, such as a spider or scorpion.
No. Spiders are not myriapod. They are arthropod's class is arachnids.
No, insects belong to the phylum Arthropod.
A bdelloid rotifer is any of a class of rotifers - aquatic multicellular organisms - in the class Bdelloidea, which are found in freshwater and most soil.
Animals. They're in the Arthropod phylum and the Insect class.
Arthropod is a phylum, not a class. It is one of the largest phyla in the animal kingdom and includes creatures like insects, spiders, and crustaceans. Within the phylum Arthropoda, there are several classes, such as Insecta, Arachnida, and Crustacea.
I believe that the answer is insecta - hope this helps
Moths belong to the phylum Arthropoda and the class Insecta.
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, a frog is not an arthropod. Frogs are amphibians, while arthropods are a group of invertebrates that includes insects, spiders, and crustaceans. Frogs have a backbone and belong to the class Amphibia.