No. A snake has a spine (backbone) so it is not an invertebrate.
Snakes are vertebrates.
A ring-necked snake, a small snake that eats invertebrates such as slugs and worms.
The 'normal' food for a Bull snake is rodents - not invertebrates.
Vertebrae is the backbone. Some things are invertebrates, like slugs , and jellyfish.
mosquito,snake,ant,butter fly,clamps,jelly fish, and scorpion
Earthworms and grasshoppers are invertebrates (no backbone) and have exoskeletons. Snakes are vertebrates (have backbones).
The glass snake, also known as the smooth snake (Ophisaurus ventralis), is a reptile that resembles a snake but is actually a legless lizard. It does not clean glass but rather burrows underground and feeds on insects and small invertebrates.
The actual name of a "garden snake" is a "garter snake." And no, they are not invertebrates. All snakes have vertebrae.
A grass snake is a reptile as are all snakes and is thus a vertebrate.
yes but it will also depend on what snake it is v
According to Internet research they are NOT poisonous and rarely bite.
Of the three: octopus, coral snake, and snail, there is only one vertebrate which is the coral snake. The reason is that it has a backbone, one of the characteristics of a vertebrate. Neither the snail nor the octopus have an internal skeleton or backbone to qualify as a vertebrate, so they are classified as invertebrates.