Yes, a gastropod is an invertebrate. The reason I know this is because snails and worms are classified as gastropods. They are vertebrates with exoskeletons as well.
Some adaptations of mollusks include an operculum that most univalves have for protection, the radula of the moon snail that is used to drill through other shells to get their food, and the jet propulsion movement and ink sac of cephalopods to escape predators.
Garden snail, 0.03 mph
in a garden
snail and slugs eat garden debris
the speed of garden snail in kilometres per hour is 0.048 km/h
in the garden
A snail is a mollusk, but not a cephalopod. That is; that they are in the Kingdom Animalia, and the Phylum Mollusca. Snails are actually members of the Class Gastropoda, which translates to "body-foot". Cephalopods belong to the Kingdom Animalia and the Phylum Mollusca, but their Class is Cephalopoda, which translates to "head-foot". Some common Cephalopods are octopi and squid.
The kind of snail that's an outdoor snail is a garden snail witch is the type that eats leaves and has a brown colour shell.
erm... a snail?
The typical garden snail's scientific name is 'helix aspersa'.
THEY are not the same kind of snail
i thing its brown