No, a crow does not have an exoskeleton. Crows, like all birds, have an endoskeleton, which is an internal skeleton made of bones. Exoskeletons are found in some invertebrates, such as insects and crustaceans, where the skeleton is on the outside of the body. Birds have feathers and other adaptations that distinguish them from animals with exoskeletons.
A fox could be a predator of the crow, if the crow were on the ground...but the predator of a crow would be an owl.
A crow is actually a member of the Crow family, which includes birds like magpies and jackdaws.
For a spider: Large frontal exoskeleton, large rectal exoskeleton, eight legs, and then their pincers at the front. Scorpions are similar, but they have a stronger exoskeleton and a tail leading on from the rectal exoskeleton. Their tail is split into roughly 10 segments, but it varies between species.
The crow
A young crow is called a chick or a fledgling.
they have exoskeleton
Yes; many cnidarians have an exoskeleton.
A butterfly has an exoskeleton. The exoskeleton appears when the caterpillar undergoes the metamorphosis process. It is the pup that dissolves and becomes the exoskeleton.
An exoskeleton.
The Exoskeleton
Exoskeleton is a noun.
No, an angelfish does not have an exoskeleton.
Yes, corals are composed of an exoskeleton
exoskeleton
exoskeleton.
When an insect sheds its outer skin, it's called molting.
They are invertibrates. Therefore they have an endoskeleton.