curio n curio [ˈkjuəriəu] an article valued for its oddness or its rareness.
Butterflies do not have bones. Instead, they have an exoskeleton made of chitin. This exoskeleton provides support and protection for their bodies.
Only wing and leg bones are hollow, but the rest is solid. I''m pretty sure.
Butterflies do not have bones.
There are 128 butterflies in total at the butterfly park. This is calculated based on the ratio of 8:4 for North American butterflies, which means for every 8 North American butterflies, there are 4 South American butterflies. Given there are 64 North American butterflies, the total number is doubled to include South American butterflies in a 1:2 ratio to European butterflies.
As far as i can tell a rabble of butterflys or a swarm of butterflys is the answer ... go figure ???
Butterflies do not have bones. Instead, they have an exoskeleton made of chitin. This exoskeleton provides support and protection for their bodies.
Only wing and leg bones are hollow, but the rest is solid. I''m pretty sure.
Butterflies are arthropods, and so do not have bones; they have an exoskeleton.
No, they are invertebrates.
None. Butterflies are insects, and insects don't have bones. They rely on exoskeletons instead.
Butterflies do not have bones.
No, they have no bones (neither does a shark - but it is a vertebrate). It lacks a back-bone (the equivalent is in front or below). A butterfly is an insect and most insects are classified as invertebrates. Butterflies have an exoskeleton, which is the outer covering of an insect.No, butterflies are invertebrates.No - butterflies have a soft body with no bones.
the answer is know but they do have a blood flow
No. "Vertebrate" means "backbone", and butterflies have no internal bones at all.
Monarch butterflies do not have bones like humans. Monarchs are insects which have exoskeletons instead. Exoskeletons are like having plates of armor made of bone (or in this case, made of chitin) on top of your body instead of inside it.
No, they have no bones (neither does a shark - but it is a vertebrate). It lacks a back-bone (the equivalent is in front or below). A butterfly is an insect and most insects are classified as invertebrates. Butterflies have an exoskeleton, which is the outer covering of an insect.No, butterflies are invertebrates.No - butterflies have a soft body with no bones.
butterflies nest