yes as snails and slugs are part of the mollusc family
Yes! All mammals have vertebrae and an internal skeleton. A mammal's spine is made up of many vertebrae, which on small or skinny cats may be able to feel. All you have to do is feel across a cat's back.
The mustang horse is no different than any other horse if you're discussing vertebrae or invertebrae. All horses are vertebrae but how many bones are in the spine depends on the breed. An animal is a vertebrate if they have a backbone/spine. So usually, any creature that has a skeleton is a vertebrate. Invertebrates don't have a backbone and usually have what is known as an extoskeleton (outer skeleton), such as insects or crabs. Therefore, the mustang is a horse and horses have spines = vertebrate.
There are numerous types of animals that both thrive in freshwater and saltwater other than fish. Such examples, for a freshwater organism, are: mammals like otters, platypus, and Capybaras, reptiles such as Alligators, Birds, such as the Great Egret, etc. As for saltwater animals, you can find tons of varieties: crustaceans, mammals, Copepods (tiny crustaceans that live in both saltwater and freshwater), Bivalves, Coral, Invertebrae, Cephalopods, reptiles, Gastropods (snails, slugs), Sea urchins, sea turtles, etc.
Answer yes,fish do have bonesyes, bony fish (i.e., Teleosts) have bones, but some do not: e.g., invertebrates like cuttlefish, jellyfish or mulloscs, and cartilaginous fish (i.e., Elasmobranchs) like sharks, skates or rays. Answer: fish do have bones.No. They have flexible cartilage like we have in our noses. We call them bones anyway even though there not. The bone meal you buy for the garden is ground up fish cartilage. If it were bone, it would be useless for a soil conditioner. It is a good source of calcium though. For a comparison of bone across species, one may refer to the following:http://www.ejbjs.org/cgi/reprint/51/3/456.pdf
No Ants do not have a back bone. In fact no insect has any bones at all, the body is supported by an exo-skeleton. A hard outer shell with the organs all inside without any bones. they have got a backbone.
Worms are invertebrates they don't have backbone.
The "cuttlebone" is a unique internal shell found in cuttlefish, which are actually mulloscs, not fish.
Yes lobsters are invertebrates, as are all Arthopods.
It's technically an exoskelatal ocean bug.
No, they are vertebrates. They have a backbone- a rather HUGE backbone.
Butterflys, snakes, ants and some other stuff
Animals that do not have a backbone. Such as snails, insects, worms, etc.
of course it is! look up sea urchin in the da dictionary!!!
go ask your mom, shes a a squid
Humans don't have "invertebrae". First off, an invertebrate is an animal that doesn't have a vertebrae, or spinal cord.
They are type of prokariyotes. So they do not have
There are 4 main groups of arthropods. They are the Chelicerata, Crustacea, Tracheata, and the now extinct Trilobites. Crabs are considered to be arthropods and are a part of the Crustacea group which also include shrimp and lobster.