nerve cord runs down the back of ALL chordates
All Chordates have:1) a notochord2) pharyngeal slits3) a postanal tail4) a hollow dorsal nerve chordRead more: What_are_the_four_characteristics_of_a_chordate
A skull made of either hard bone or cartilage
All chordates have a dorsal, hollow nerve cord, a flexible, rodlike, internal supporting structure called a notochord, and paired gill slits in the throat region at some point in their lives.
A dolphin i AA cordate because it has back bones and lots of other bones that make it a chordate
sounds like its sciatic nerve pain. It starts in or around your hip/lower back and goes all the way down to you toes.
All Chordates have:1) a notochord2) pharyngeal slits3) a postanal tail4) a hollow dorsal nerve chordRead more: What_are_the_four_characteristics_of_a_chordate
Nerve cord
All Chordates have(in part of their life or another) A Notochord A hollow dorsal nerve cord A post-anal tail
It has a nerve chord running down its back, the defining trait of all chordates.
A vertebral column. (a back bone)
notochord
all vertebrates are chordates because vertebrates are the sub- group of phylum chordates and also it follow one of the important feature of the chordates i.e. presence of notochord whereas all chordates are not vertebrates because some chordates are cephalochordates, urochordates.
One characteristic shared by all chordates is the presence of a notochord, a flexible rod that provides structural support. Humans, being classified under the phylum Chordata, possess a notochord during their embryonic development that eventually develops into the spinal column.
Yes, all chordates have a nerve chord running down their back and an earthworm has a nerve chord running down it's back therefore it is a chordate
Yes. All chordates are coelomates.
There isn't a "popular name" for them. The most familiar chordates are the vertebrates, but not all chordates are vertebrates (tunicates, for example, are chordates).
all chordates - novanet now all you guys get back to work :D