leech
Hirudinaria is the genus for a type of leech. Hirudinaria manillensis is a buffalo leech.
The binomial name depends from the species;eg. Hirudo medicinalis is the binomial name of the European common leech.
No, a leech is not an insect. Leeches belong to the phylum Annelida, while insects belong to the phylum Arthropoda. Leeches are invertebrates that are more closely related to earthworms than to insects.
The bloodsucking insect beginning with "L" and having 5 letters is the "louse." Lice are small parasitic insects that infest the hair, feathers, or skin of animals and humans.
yes. a leech is a parasite. some may think of it as an insect or animal, but it is a parasite.
segmented worms
A leech is also an annelidia, such as the earthworm.
A leech
They're both slimy and wriggle around, the only differences are leeches suck blood and swim in lakes
The physical characteristics of a leech is a sucker at each end of the body.
annelid- earthworm
yes. a leech is a parasite. some may think of it as an insect or animal, but it is a parasite.
The Leech and the Earthworm - 2003 was released on: USA: 4 April 2003 (limited) Greece: June 2004 (Ecocinema Festival)
Leeches belong to the phylum Annelida (ringworms), like the common earthworm! They are very similar, they have the same bodyplan, rings and bristles.
The three examples of phylum annelida are earthworm,leech and whatever............
The leech (phylum Annelida, of the subclass Hirudinea) is a blood-sucking segmented worm. It is an invertebrate as it does not have a spine.
No. Leeches are annelids, sometimes called segmented worms.