Insects have body Sections but Arthopods have body Segments.
Assuming this question is how are insects different from other arthropods, insects fall into hexapods which includes insects, springtails and a few other groups of arthropods with six legs. Insects are different from other hexapods in that they possess a structure called a tentorium which is an internal support skeleton in the head made by extensions of the exoskeleton into the head.
Bumblebees are insects, and all insects are arthropods.
Insects are arthropods.
Insects And other Arthropods
Yes, entomologists study spiders as part of their research on insects and other arthropods.
They express the characteristics inherent to arthropods. All insects are arthropods. Not all arthropods are insects.
No. While centipedes and insects are both Arthropods, they belong to different subphylums.
No. Arthropoda is a phylum, containing the classes Insecta, Arachnida, Crustacea and Myriapoda - insects, arachnids, crustaceans and centi/millipedes. So all insects are arthropods but not all arthropods are insects. ^^
They express the characteristics inherent to arthropods. All insects are arthropods. Not all arthropods are insects.
Insects are the largest group of arthropods.
All insects present an exoskeleton, so all insects are arthropods.
Yes they are. Cockroaches are insects, which, along with other segmented organisms with exoskeletons, are also arthropods.