Ants are not vertebrates. They have exoskeletons
its a ant
Do you mean an ant? Your aunt would obviously be a vertebrate.
Ants are invertebrates because they have an exoskeleton with no backbone.
An ant is classed as a verterbrate animal however it has one of the smallest verterbrates in the world.
All insects are invertebrate.
No, a leaf-cutter ant is not a vertebrate. It is an invertebrate, belonging to the class Insecta within the phylum Arthropoda. Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone or spinal column, while leaf-cutter ants lack this structure.
Oh, let's see . . . Aardvark, Asp, African elephant, Ape are some that immediately come to mind.
Ants are invertebrates because they have an exoskeleton with no backbone.
No, ants are invertebrates, not vertebrates; Yes, moose are vertebrates. Ants have an exoskeleton and thus lack a back bone. Moose have an endoskeleton, and thus need a backbone in order to protect the very sensitive spinal cord from potential damage.
Swans are birds, and all birds have internal skeletons, so no, a swan is not an invertebrate.
A vertebrate is an animal with a vertebra. A vertebra is a spine. Examples of vertebrates would be apes, birds, snakes and fish. An invertebrate does not have a spine. Examples - a slug, an octopus, an ant.
A Beaver is a vertebrate and a mammal.