Yes. Even though we don't have tails, we resembke them in embryotic development
They are neither a deuterostome or a protostome, since they only have one opening.
Yes, the term 'environment' can include humans as well. Humans are a part of the natural environment and are impacted by and have an impact on the surrounding ecosystems and natural resources. Thus, considering humans as part of the environment is important in understanding the interconnectedness of all living beings.
The primary gas that humans exhale when breathing is carbon dioxide.
No, humans do not live in the geosphere. The geosphere refers to the solid part of the Earth composed of rocks, minerals, and landforms, while humans live on the Earth's surface known as the biosphere.
No, millions of years ago humans did not exist. The earliest known species of humans, Australopithecus, appeared approximately 4 million years ago, while modern humans, Homo sapiens, emerged around 300,000 years ago.
humans, chordates are anything with a spine.
No. Humans are chordates.
Chordates are a diverse group of animals that includes humans, and they are not inherently harmful. While some species of chordates may pose a threat due to factors like venom or aggression, the majority of chordates play important roles in ecosystems and are not harmful to humans.
All chordates are deuterostomes, meaning that in all chordates, the anus develops first during embryological development. All chordates are bilaterally symmetric. Most chordates have a complete digestive tract, and a body cavity. Note: not all chordates have these features, but it is believed that their absence in some chordates is secondary. All chordates are of course animals and eukaryotes.
yes we are! Because we have a backbone.
Not necessarily. While some chordates, like humans and other mammals, have relatively large brains compared to their body size, not all chordates have large brains. Chordates range in complexity from simple organisms like tunicates to more advanced vertebrates like birds and primates.
Yes, all chordates share the presence of a notochord at some stage in their development. However, the phylum Chordata is not specific to humans; it includes a diverse group of animals like fish, birds, reptiles, and mammals.
Some harmful effects of chordates can include overpopulation causing environmental imbalances, transmission of diseases to humans or other animals, and competition for resources leading to disruption of ecosystems. Additionally, certain chordates can be invasive species, displacing native species and causing harm to local biodiversity.
Chordates have a wide range of feeding habits depending on the specific species. Some chordates, like humans, eat a varied diet of plants and animals. Others, such as fish, may be herbivores, carnivores, or omnivores. Some chordates, like sea squirts, are filter feeders, while others, like hagfish, are scavengers.
Not all chordates have fins. While many aquatic chordates, such as fish, possess fins for swimming, other groups, like mammals (including humans) and birds, do not have fins. Instead, these animals have evolved different structures for locomotion, such as limbs for walking or wings for flying. Thus, fins are characteristic of certain chordate lineages but not a universal feature of all chordates.
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 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.