Yes. Echinoderms, such as starfish, are segmented, but their segmentation is not along a longitudinal axis because of their radial symmetry.
Source: http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0073031216/student_view0/exercise37/segmentation.html
Yes, a starfish is segmented into arms or rays, which radiate out from a central disc. Each arm contains intricate structures that help the starfish move, sense its environment, and capture prey.
Starfish do have a segmented body, but not in the same way insects do. This is due to their unique shape. Approximately 1,500 species of starfish have been identified.
A snail would not be classified as an arthropod; it is a mollusk. A starfish, on the other hand, is classified as an echinoderm, not an arthropod either. Arthropods include organisms like insects, arachnids, and crustaceans, characterized by their exoskeletons and segmented bodies. Therefore, neither the starfish nor the snail is an arthropod.
No, Arthropods are invertebrates (no spine) have an external exoskeleton which is a segmented, jointed legs such as insects like ants, beetles etc, and crustaceans such as crabs, lobsters, crayfish etc. Starfish, aka Sea Stars are referred to as echinoderms and belong to the Asteroidea class. Other examples of which include Urchins, Sand Dollar and Sea Cucumber.
segmented body
1.snails 2.sponges 3.starfish 4.jellyfish 5.insects 6.segmented worms 7.octopus 8.shellfish 9.snake have bones 10.squid 11.sharks LOOK THROUGH THE OTHER QUESTIONS FIRST! worms sharks snails insects starfish jellyfish
does a protozoe have segmented bodies
No, ticks are not segmented worms.
No. Insects have segmented bodies
they're segmented...
there are cusion starfish, reef starfish, spiny starfish and fire brick starfish in new zealand.
Tagalog translation of SEGMENTED: paghiwalay-hiwalayin