To answer the question in the simplest way, the leopard has a backbone.
However, there is more to it than that, especially given that there are two invertebrate chordate groups - Urochordata (tunicates) and Cephalachordata (lancelets) - whose backbone is not in the form of actual vertebrae.
As Chordates (or members of the phylum Chordata), leopards share the following characteristics:
dorsal nerve cord which is a bundle of nerve fibres which runs down the back. It connects the brain with the lateral muscles and other organs.
notochordwhich is a cartilaginous rod running underneath, and supporting, the nerve cord - in the case of the leopard, a spine.
post-anal tail - an extension of the body past the anal opening. (This feature is not always present in some adult Chordates such as frogs and humans, but it is present in the leopard.)
Pharyngeal pouches - Chordates, at some stage of their life, have pharyngeal grooves and pouches that develop into other essential parts of their anatomy.
The humpback whale belongs to the phylum Chordata.
phylum chordata
yes it is it's in chordata phylum yes it is it's in chordata phylum
Whales belong to the phylum Chordata.
It has a backbone so it's included in the phylum chordata, even most people will not think that way because they live in water.
The phylum of the hammerhead shark is Chordata.
chordata
The killer whale (also kown as the orca) belongs to the phylum Chordate (Chordata).
Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish)SharkPhylum: ChordataSubPhylum: Vertebrata (vertebrates)
Sharks belong to Phylum Chordata.
The frog human and a shark
Sharks are a group of fish with a skeleton of cartilage instead of bone. There are over 470 species of shark ranging from the dwarf lanternshark (6.7 inches long) to the whale shark (39 feet long). Their phylum is Chordata (having a backbone), and class is Chondrichthyes (cartilage skeleton).