no they are invertebrates.
Tapeworms belong to the order Cyclophyllidea. This order is characterized by their flat, segmented bodies and includes various species that are parasitic in the intestines of vertebrates. Cyclophyllidea is part of the class Cestoda, which encompasses all tapeworms.
No, parasites can be both invertebrates and vertebrates. Some examples of vertebrate parasites include tapeworms and lice, while examples of invertebrate parasites include ticks and fleas.
No, stomach acids do not kill tapeworms. Tapeworms are adapted to the environment of the alimentary canal; if they were not, there would be no tapeworms.
Tapeworms are a kind of flatworm. Most flatworms are not tapeworms.
Tapeworms are of the class Cestoda of the phylum Platyhelminthes.
Yes tapeworms are in cookiedough but you have a very small chance of getting tapeworms from eating it...
No. tapeworms are pest to humans.
TAPEWORMS
Because of environmental contamination. Tapeworms shed eggs into the environment and those eggs then turn into the next generation of tapeworms. Treatment of tapeworms with medication only kill the adult tapeworms currently residing in that animal, but the environment and other animals remain a source of eggs and adult tapeworms.
NO there are no tapeworms at mt. rainier.
YES
No. Tapeworms are not arthropods. They do not have an exoskeleton. They are flatworms in the phylum platyhelminthes.