Yes, they do.
Indeed they are color blind, they cannot see colors that humans can see. But they can see the ultraviolet rays of the sun, that us humans can see.
Some invertebrates live in a variety of environments such as the ocean, freshwater habitats, soil, and even on land. Examples include coral reefs for marine invertebrates, rivers and lakes for aquatic invertebrates, and forests or grasslands for terrestrial invertebrates.
They are invertebrates. All insects are invertebrates. (P.S. 'Invertebrate' or 'Vertebrate' is spelled with an 'e' not an 'i' ^_^)
They are invertebrates
Often, mammals (and other animals) that feed on invertebrates are called insectivores because they feed primarily on insects.Apart from these, there are several mammals that feed on invertebrates. Monotremes commonly do so, and these are the platypuses and echidnas. Many small dasyurids (carnivorous marsupials) also feed on invertebrates. These include animals such as phascogales and numbats. Other mammals that feed on invertebrates include anteaters and hedgehogs.
See Related Links for a Google image gallery of Invertebrates
Try doing a Google Image Search for the word invertebrates. See Related Links for an example.
Yes, ants are invertebrates like all insects are. They do not have a backbone (spine) which is what would classify them as vertebrates. See related questions and links for additional details.
Yes. They are mollusks. Please see the wikipedia entry.
Macro-invertebrates are animals that are big enough to see with the naked eye, and that do not have a backbone.
They are insects, therefore they are invertebrates.
See the Related Link for a list of invertebrates (animals with no backbone).
Invertebrates do not have spines (backbones). See related questions and links for more information.
Invertebrates do not have spines (backbones). See related questions and links for more information.
no, tigers don't see color because they are color blind
No, they are no invertebrates.
they see color.