Centipedes and other myriapods (like millipedes) belong in Arthropoda because they possess the physical and functional properties deemed characteristic of phylum arthropoda: joint appendages (legs, antennae), segmented body, and the chitinous exoskeleton.
No. Centipedes belongs to the phylum Arthropoda.
Centipedes belong to the phylum Arthropoda.
Class:Chilopoda
Type your answer here... They are suckers
Centipedes come from the Class Chilopoda within the Phylum Arthropoda (arthropods).
No, centipedes are not vertebrates, they are invertebrates and included in phylum Arthropoda.
No. Segmented worms are "annelids", like earthworms. Centipedes belong to the class chilopoda, along with other centipedes. They are also part of the phylum arthropoda, which is an entirely separate phylum from segmented worms.
Yes, centipedes do not have a backbone and are thus invertebrates. Centipedes are arthropods (Phylum Arthropoda), myriapods (Superclass Myriapoda) and chilopods (Class Chilopoda).
Arthropoda is the scientific name. It is the name of the Phylum Arthropoda, the phylum of arthropods and includes insects, arachnids, crustaceans, sea spiders, centipedes and millipedes.
Insects, arachnids (spiders, scorpions), crustaceans (crabs, shrimp), and myriapods (millipedes, centipedes) belong to the phylum Arthropoda. This phylum is characterized by having jointed legs and a hard exoskeleton.
Yes, crustaceans are animals, part of phylum Arthropoda, along with insects, arachnids, trilobites and centipedes.
The phylum of housefly is Arthropoda.