its called chintin im not sure that's how you spell it
Yes they are.
Some animals that have pincers are lobsters, crabs, and earwig. There are also insects called pincer bugs that have pincers.
Crabs and Lobsters have a few things similar to each other. For instance, · Crabs and lobsters are seafood. · Crabs and lobsters live underground. · Crabs and lobsters have shells. · Crabs and lobsters have claws. · Crabs and lobsters live in oceans. · Crabs and lobsters are omnivores. · Crabs and lobsters come from the society of Animalia.
Pesticides designed to kill insects may be more likely to harm lobsters and crabs than fish because insects are more closely related to crabs and lobsters. Insects, crabs and lobsters are all arthropods, while fish are not.
Chitin is the polysaccharide found in the exoskeleton of crabs, lobsters, and insects. It is a structural molecule that provides strength and protection to these arthropods. Chitin is composed of N-acetylglucosamine units and is the second most abundant biopolymer in nature after cellulose.
Crabs and lobsters are arthropods. In colloquial speech the term "bug" generally refers to arthropods on land, mostly insects and arachnids. In scientific terms the only true bugs are insects in the order hemiptera, excluding crustaceans, which are not insects.
No. Crustaceans are sea critters with hard shells. For example, lobsters and crabs are custraceans.
lobsters, hermit crabs, snails, most insects
Crabs, bees, ants, spiders, millipedes. turtles, tortoises, and lobsters all have exoskeletons.
Chitin is the polysaccharide that gives the insect's exoskeleton the resistance to bending resulting in breaking or cracking. It is also a prime compound and component found in the shells lobsters, crabs, and other shellfish.
The animals that have shells are:LobstersTurtlesCrabsSnailsHermit CrabsMussel [Sea Creature]ArmadillosNorthern Horse MusselNorthern Moon SnailShrimpsWharf CrabAtlantic Horse Shoe CrabSome of these animals might not have a protective shell.
Lobsters are nocturnal predators, meaning they catch live prey at night. They use their large claws to break open the shells of clams, crabs, mussels, sea urchins and even other lobsters.