No, a ladybird cannot be classified as a mollusk; it is an insect belonging to the family Coccinellidae. Insects and mollusks are distinct groups within the animal kingdom, with significant differences in their anatomy and life cycles. Ladybirds have a hard exoskeleton, jointed legs, and are part of the class Insecta, while mollusks, such as snails and clams, belong to the class Mollusca and typically have soft bodies and, in many cases, a hard shell.
No. Oysters are mollusks, which have shells rather than bones.
Yes,Because from seeing the picture of a male and a female ladybird we see that the girl ladybird is ligther than the male ladybirds.
Coccinellid is the name of all ladybugs.Specifically, the term comes from the Latin word coccineus for "scarlet" since the insect in question's body has orange, red or yellow as the predominant color. The English term honors the beetle's scientific family, Coccinellidae. It represents a more scientific way of designating the beetle than any of the insect's common names (lady beetles, lady cows, ladybird beetles, ladybirds, ladybugs).
The Latin word for "ladybird" or "ladybug" is coccinella.Scientifically speaking, these beetles are members of the family Coccinellidae, which comprises more than 5000 species.
They have an exoskeleton rather than an endoskeleton like mammalia or reptilia
The males are smaller than the female
No, there are more known insect species than there are known mollusc species. Insects make up the majority of known animal species, with estimates suggesting there may be millions of insect species compared to around 85,000 known mollusc species.
Insect population is larger.
Cnidarians include jellyfish and corals. Cnidarians are less complex than annelids or mollusks because the latter have gills with many layers of tissue.
Answer Pearls are not mined. They are organic gems produces by mollusks. Pearl-producing mollusks have been around for more than 500 million years.
None. There is no insect with more than 10 legs. If so, it belongs to another creature classification.
No, it's a mammal, much much larger than your average insect.