No ......mollusks are not segmented,like insects....just their body is partitioned into head, foot, and visceral hump..........but one can't take it as segmentation.........
I know a segmented worm does.
Mollusks compose of the large phylum of invertebrate animals known as the Mollusca. Mollusks have a mantle, mollusks invertebrate. Arthropods have jointed appendages, arthropods have segmented bodies
Athropods. Certainly!
Yes these two share common ancestors.
Yes, molluscs fit into the group known as protostomes.
wat do all the worms have in common
No, leeches are not mollusks; they belong to the phylum Annelida, which includes segmented worms. Mollusks, such as snails and clams, are part of a different phylum called Mollusca. Leeches are more closely related to earthworms and other annelids than to mollusks.
lol, are you doing sections 1 and 2 for mollusks and segmented worms?
No, snails are not segmented animals. They belong to the phylum Mollusca and are classified as mollusks, which have a soft, unsegmented body. Unlike segmented animals such as annelids, snails have a coiled shell and a body divided into distinct parts, such as the head, foot, and visceral mass, but these parts are not segmented in the same way as those found in segmented worms.
Mollusks and segmented worms have a one-way digestive system, a separate mouth and anus, and their larvae are very similar. This is the best evidence that they have a common ancestor.
1. Roundworm (Nematoda)2. Mollusks (Mollusca)3. Segmented worms (Annelida)4. Arthropods (Arthropoda)5. Chordates (Chordata)6. Echinodermata (Echinodermata)
Annelids, mollusks, and arthropods are classified as invertebrates, which are animals lacking a backbone. They belong to the larger group called Coelomates, characterized by having a true coelom, a fluid-filled body cavity. Annelids are segmented worms, mollusks include diverse organisms like snails and octopuses, and arthropods encompass insects, arachnids, and crustaceans, all distinguished by their body structures and developmental processes.