Both invertebrates and vertebrates excrete waste products such as ammonia, urea, and uric acid as a way to eliminate nitrogenous waste from their bodies. The type of nitrogenous waste excreted depends on the animal's habitat and physiology.
Yes. As all vertebrates, they have an internal skeleton to give their bodies stability.
Vertebrates have the same waste-disposal problems as invertebrates. They must deal with the very toxic ammonia their bodies produce, and most vertebrates must expel wastes while conserving water.
Most vertebrates have a backbone made up of individual bones called vertebrae, which protect the spinal cord. They also have a well-developed nervous system, a defined head with a skull to protect the brain, and bilateral symmetry.
No, they have a backbone just like you do.
fish and reptiles aun.
Ostrich are not able to fly and are enormous. They are not the most intelligent bird. Their bodies are huge but their brains are peanut sized.
vertebrates
No, they are arthopods. They have an exoskeleton, on the outside of their body. Vertebrates, like fish, birds, and mammals, have an endoskeleton inside their bodies, of which the vertebral column is the central component.
What materials make up the endoskeletons of most vertebrates
Well they are decomposers, which break down the dead bodies of mammals, so they are actually decomposers. Worms are not vertebrates because they don't have a spine or spinal chord.
Yes, most fish species have backbones, therefore are vertebrates.