Being an insect, 3. (head, thorax, abdomen)
Stick Insects are insects, so like every other insect species, they have six legs.
a stick insect has 3 body parts. The head, the abdaman and the legs. But it has to have more than 3 legs to be a insect.
One. Only invertibrates such as insects and worms have segmented bodies.
All insects, ants included, have three body sections, which are; head, abdomen and thorax.
A praying mantis is an insect and, like all insects, has three body parts - a head, a thorax, and an abdomen.
No, a beetle has three parts of the beetles body!
The arthropod body plan has a great deal to do with how they are classified. Insects are hexapods with three body sections, a head, consollidated thorax with three leg pairs, and an abdomen. The chelicerates, like arachnids, have two main body sections and eight legs. Myriapods have up to hundreds of sections each with a leg pair. Many crustaceans are decapods, have ten legs, often a fused cephalothorax and articulated abdominal segments like lobsters, crayfish, shrimp, prawns and krill; similar is true of crabs except the short abdomen (tail) is folded up beneath the thorax. Trilobites (now extinct) are named for having three longitudinal lobes.
Three: head, thorax, abdomen. The same as you.
1,500
3000 species worldwide
insects camouflage in many different ways. one way is with coloring, like the grasshopper, most grasshoppers that you see are green or tan to blend in with their environment. other bugs like the "stick bug" have a specialized body shape to camouflage, in this case, the shape of a stick.
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