There isn't really a common name, since vertebrates are all animals with a backbone/internal skeleton, as opposed to bugs, octopuses, and other animals that don't have that kind of skeletal system.
A vertebrate has vertebrae (vertebrae is the plural of vertebra). A vertebra is one of many bones in the spine.
The stingray is a vertebrate, scientifically classified in the phylum Chordata. Its skeleton is made of cartilage instead of bone, but it still has a vertebrate skeleton. AND IT IS A CHORDATEStingrays are vertebrates
Bat is the common name.
jawbone is the common name, but the scientific name is the mandible
Yes, a vertebrate is anything that has a back bone. An invertebrate has no back bone.
A peacock is a vertebrate because it has a backbone or spine, which is a defining characteristic of vertebrate animals. Vertebrates are animals with an internal skeleton that includes a backbone made of individual bones called vertebrae.
There is no "vertebrate" name for any animal. Only the common name, genus name, class name, species type, and the scientific name. All rabbits are in the Lagomorpha class and all rabbits have their own scientific name.
all vertebrate have a spinal cord.
Feathers
The Girrafe 7
pouches
Toads have a spinal cord and backbone, which means they are vertebrates.
A vertebrate.
A vertebrate.
a vertebrate
All vertebrate embryos look roughly the same, showing that they come from a common ancestor.
Yes, the noun vertebrates is the plural form of the common noun vertebrate; a general word for any type of animal that has a backbone or spinal column.
Vertebrate means backbone, so if its a vertebrate animal it's an animal with a backbone. The back bone is the trait the separates them from invertebrates.