The Segmented worms are forefathers of the most modern complex organisms. The segmentation seen in the earliest worms lead to the ability to join complex systems. So from the lowly fly to the largest whale can trace its development back to the segmented worms of the past.
segmented have lines in them and non dont.
I think a lot of Birds
Anthropods is the largest and most diverse of all animals. These animals have segmented bodies that are supported by an exoskeleton. This group includes spiders, crustaceans, millipedes, and centipedes.
No, pigs, pigeons, fish, and frogs are not segmented animals. They have distinct body structures that are not divided into segments like some other types of animals.
No, cats are not segmented. Cats are mammals, I believe only some worms and some insects are segmented.
segmented have lines in them and non dont.
Annalids include things like earthworms and leeches: non-segmented, amphibious, invertebrates.
Actually, contrary to popular opinion, they, in fact, are segmented.
Jellyfish do not display segmentation. They have a simple, non-segmented body structure compared to other animals like earthworms or insects.
Heterotrophs
I think a lot of Birds
The arthropods (for instance, centipedes) are believed to have descended from the annelids (segmented worms).
arthropods (insects ect.)
arthropods
No, snails are not segmented animals. They belong to the phylum Mollusca and are classified as mollusks, which have a soft, unsegmented body. Unlike segmented animals such as annelids, snails have a coiled shell and a body divided into distinct parts, such as the head, foot, and visceral mass, but these parts are not segmented in the same way as those found in segmented worms.
Anthropods is the largest and most diverse of all animals. These animals have segmented bodies that are supported by an exoskeleton. This group includes spiders, crustaceans, millipedes, and centipedes.
Animals with outer shells and segmented bodies are members of the phylum arthrapoda. This phylum includes insects and chelicerae's (spiders, millipedes, etc.).