The thorax of a Monarch is the section to which it's front six legs (the back ten 'legs' are prolegs) are attached.
Yes, the monarch butterfly's body is divided into three main segments: the head, thorax, and abdomen. Each segment has distinct functions, with the head containing sensory organs and mouthparts, the thorax housing the wings and legs, and the abdomen containing reproductive and digestive organs. This segmentation is a common characteristic of insects, allowing for specialized functions in each body part.
It is divided into three parts: Head, Thorax and abdomen. The thorax is the middle part and the abdomen is the rear part and if you mean the all the body parts it has five. Head, Wings, Antlers, Legs, and body.
the head is superior to the thorax. the thorax is inferior to the head.
The thorax. See the related link for more information.
The thorax of an ant is considered to be its powerhouse. The thorax is the portion of the body to which the ant's legs are attached. There are three sections to the thorax in ants.
The middle segment is the thorax. Insects typically have (3)-head, thorax, abdomen.
The thorax is the middle part of the bee. The honeybee shivers the muscles in the thorax and when the thorax is warm enough the bee can fly.
The head is connected to the thorax and the thorax connects to the abdomen.
Middle part is the thorax.
the answer to that is "cephalothorax" which is a head and a thorax.
no, Spiders have a thorax
Thorax is a scientific name.