Yes. Leeches are invertebrates and they are related to worms.
Leeches are invertebrates. because they have no backbone
Leeches are from the subclass Hirudinea and a kind of segmented worm but differ in significant ways. Leeches eat a prey on small invertebrates, and they use their interior suckers to feed on their host.
no they do not have a back bone. They are invertebrates
Verebrates are things with backbones, like humans, mice, birds, ect. Invertebrates are things without backbones, lke snails, octopi, leeches, ect.
Leeches can help stimulate Blood flow, and Bees can help by being a pollinator for plants
Leeches can help stimulate Blood flow, and Bees can help by being a pollinator for plants
Well, ants, snails, clams, spider, lobsters, earthworms, leeches, octopus, jellyfishes, and sea anenemes.
No leeches are definitely not Mammals. Leeches are annelids comprising the subclass Hirudinea. There are fresh water, terrestrial, and marine leeches. Like the Oligochaeta, they share the presence of a clitellum. Like earthworms, leeches are hermaphrodites. Some, but not all leeches feed on blood. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leeches
Leeches are not considered carnivores; instead, they are classified as mostly parasitic or detritivorous organisms. While some species of leeches do feed on the blood of host animals, others consume decomposing organic matter or small invertebrates. Their feeding habits vary significantly among different species, but they are not strictly carnivorous.
Leeches are invertebrates. They live in shallow ponds and lakes, among plants. They hook on to creatures like us, and cut a minor hole in our body, and suck our blood. It cannot drain much blood unless you don't notice it for a long time. They used leeches back in the 1600's, as a remedy to "bad blood."
no they are annelids (segmented worms)
Annalids include things like earthworms and leeches: non-segmented, amphibious, invertebrates.