Take a picture of a butterfly and you will have your answer. Butterflies have an exoskeleton, meaning that their "skin" is their skeleton.
google images of undertaker's skeleton tattoo
http://www.mda.org/Publications/Quest/q135cmt_foot.html
It depends where the picture is and what type of picture.
Butterflies are insects. Insects are Arthropod animals. They have exoskeletons, which means the skeleton is on the outside instead of the inside. Butterflies have to shed their skin to grow, which you can see when the caterpiller splits its skin, crawls out, then changes into a pupa.
A vertebrate is an animal with a backbone and skeleton. Caterpillars are baby butterflies. They do not have skeletons.
I answered a similar question to this a little while ago. See the related link to Wikipedia - for a picture of a complete snake skeleton.
None. Butterflies are insects, and insects don't have bones. They rely on exoskeletons instead.
Butterflies have a hard exoskeleton called the exoskeleton that provides support and protection. Their exoskeleton is on the outside to help them maintain their shape and structure. The exoskeleton also provides attachment points for muscles, allowing butterflies to move and fly.
Yes they do ! See related link for a picture !
You can find a skeleton at a museum about science.
everywhere
Butterflies typically find their food sources in flowers, where they feed on nectar.