arthropods
they have body segments that you can see
Sometimes yes, sometimes no, non-poisonous include some Spiders, lobsters, almost all crabs, almost all insects, some scorpions. Poisonous include some spiders, some scorpions, a few insects, cone snails, and horseshoe crabs.
I think you mean arthropods? An arthropod is an invertebrate that has an exoskeleton (a skeleton on the outside), joined appendages, and a segmented body. Many examples are horseshoe crabs (which aren't actually crabs at all - they are most related to spiders), lobsters, and crabs, spiders, and other insects.
Arachnids (spiders, scorpions), crustaceans (crabs, lobsters), and myriapods (centipedes, millipedes).
Crabs, bees, ants, spiders, millipedes. turtles, tortoises, and lobsters all have exoskeletons.
Ovoviviparous refers to an animal that retains the egg inside of them until it hatches and gives birth to larval young. Two insects that do this are Sarcophagid flies and tachinids.
All of these (insects, snails, lobsters) are invertebrates without internal skeletons or back bones.
all bugs/what are determined as insects have six legs. it's part of what makes them insects. spiders are NOT insects, they are arachnids. that they have eight legs is partially what determines this. crabs and lobsters have ten legs, making them very difficult to buy shoes for.
It is animal with a segmented body, exoskeleton and jointed appendages, belonging to the phylum Arthropoda. Examples are insects, spiders, scorpions, millipedes, crayfish, crabs, trilobites, and many other groups are all arthropods. A terrestrial arthropod also breathes air at some stage in its life cycle.
Arthropods belong to a major classification in taxonomy, characterized by joint appendages, external skeletons, and segmented bodies. They include arachnids, sea Spiders, horseshoe crabs, myriapods (like millipedes), and crustaceans like true crabs, shrimp, and lobsters. They also include all the insects.
Yes. All insects, Spiders, arachnids, etc. are arthropods.
Spiders don't have any antennaes at all, In fact there're not insects at all!!! They are in the class Arachnida