In grasshoppers, the five specialized parts for movement are the legs, wings, thorax, abdomen, and joints. The legs are adapted for jumping and walking, while the wings enable flight. The thorax houses the muscles that power these movements, and the abdomen aids in balance and coordination. Joints provide flexibility and range of motion, allowing for agile and efficient movement.
No. They have biting mouth parts, but they do not have teeth.
Grasshoppers eat all leafy parts of plants growing in the yard and attract birds as their prey.
No, they lack the body parts needed to preform that function.
Grasshoppers eat leaves, and they need to be able to cut off pieces that are small enough for them to swallow.
No, grasshoppers have only three body parts: the head, the thorax, and the abdomen.
Organelles
Grasshoppers do not have a shell like some other insects; instead, they have an exoskeleton made of chitin. This exoskeleton is not coiled nor composed of two similar parts, but rather provides structural support and protection. Grasshoppers' bodies are segmented, with distinct parts including the head, thorax, and abdomen. The exoskeleton can be tough and may vary in texture and color, but it does not form a traditional "shell."
Fish have specialized parts (gills, fins, scales, for example) that enable the fish to live and breathe under water.
Well beetles and grasshoppers are alike one because obviously they are both animals which are insects and two because they are both insects that have chewing mouth parts. So mosquitoes, moths, butterflies, flies and so on are insects that have sucking mouth parts, where as the ants, bees, wasps, beetles, weevils, grasshoppers, crickets and so on eat by biting and chewing not sucking.
The soft and green parts of plants. Hint - why are they green.
Organelles
unicellular