No - it has no bones inside its body. No insect has bones or an internal skeleton. most insects and other invertebrates (meaning they have no backbone) have an exoskeleton - a hard shell on the outside of its body that protects it's soft, internal organs.
Millipedes do NOT have a back-bone. They have a soft body, supported by an external 'skeleton' of hard 'plates' and segments.
A millipede belongs to the class Diplopoda in the animal kingdom.
Either a centipede or a millipede.
"Millie" would be a cute and fitting name for a pet millipede.
A millipede is an invertebrate. A reptile is a vertebrate. I am afraid a millipede is far from being a reptile.
yes a millipede can grow back
No, it is not.Millepede has 36 to 600 legs while insects have only 6 legs.Millepede belongs Diplopoda class.Hope this helped you guys.
Millipedes do NOT have a back-bone. They have a soft body, supported by an external 'skeleton' of hard 'plates' and segments.
I lost count on the millipede's legs! That millipede should not be blue.
the spider consumes the millipede
yes a millipede is an invertabrate. :)
You can find a millipede in the sand
Get millipede killer!!
a millipede is an exoskeletal invertebrate!!!!
millipede
No. A millipede is a myriapod, which is a kind of arthropod.
A millipede is a small invertebrate belonging to the Phylum Arthropoda.Unlike its name seems to suggest, the millipede does not have one million legs.I tried counting the legs on a millipede, but it wouldn't stay still long enough. My cat was fascinated as it sat in the garden watching a millipede. The millipede tickled as it crawled over my foot.