Yes rabbits do have a back bone - it is the weakest bone in their body, so you have to be careful when/if you handle one because it can snap very easily.
well, Amoebas do not have a backbone. which makes them a invertabrate.
Jawbone is to mandible, as backbone is to:spine/vertebral column
An invertebrate has no backbone. This differentiates them from vertebrates, which do have a backbone or spinal column. Invertebrates make up the vast majority of animal species on Earth.
No, lancelets do not have a backbone. They are small, fish-like marine invertebrates that belong to the subphylum Cephalochordata and possess a notochord instead of a true backbone.
The sugar-phosphate backbone has the phosphates as the backbone with the ribose sugars as the attachments (connections) to the [C or G or A or T] nucleotides.
i know that its a vertibrate animal cause it has a back bone/spine
Yes, a jackrabbit has a back bone if it didnt it would not be able to jump
Yes, rabbits, like all mammals, have a backbone. It is a crucial part of their skeletal system that supports their body and allows for movement. The backbone is also known as the spinal column or vertebral column.
Rabbits are in the class "mammalia" and the order "lagamorpha." So, they are mammals. Their type of mammal is lagamorph. They are not rodents as some people think. Lagamorphs consist of rabbits, hares, and pikas.
Yes, a Holland Lop is a vertebrate. It is a breed of domestic rabbit, and like all rabbits, it belongs to the class Mammalia, which are characterized by having a backbone or spine. Vertebrates are animals that possess a vertebral column, and rabbits, including Holland Lops, fit this classification.
No, a rabbit is a mammal and as such has bones and vertebraes.
Yes they do!Yes, they have a backbone.
no bees are invertabrates that means they have no backbone
No. No insect has a backbone.
No plankton do not have a backbone.
Backbone is dick.
A pain on your backbone