The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Invertebrates


There are thought to be 5 million species


of invertebrate roaming the planet—


that’s 95 percent of all animal life on


Earth. They are the world’s most


successful animals and can be found


on land, in the sea, in the air, and even


inside your body!


LIVING WORLD


WHAT IS AN INVERTEBRATE?
Animals without backbones are called
invertebrates. They have no internal skeleton;
instead, some have an exoskeleton (a hard outer
cover, like a crab or a beetle), some live inside a
shell (such as snails and clams), and some are
divided into soft segments (such as worms).

New clothes, please!
Exoskeletons don’t
grow even when the
body inside them
does. So as an
invertebrate gets
bigger, it needs to
shed its shell
and make a
new one.

There is a huge variety of invertebrate.
The differences lie not just in the way they look, but
also in their behavior and even the way they move.

 SPONGES
are invertebrates
of the simplest
kind: they don’t
even have a
head or a
brain...

... Yet octopuses are very
intelligent. A female in
captivity learned to
open jars by copying
her keeper.

 ANTS are social
animals that work
together for
survival...

... But tarantulas
live and hunt
alone.

 CORAL looks
like a plant
and barely
moves,
rooted to the
seabed...

... But
monarch
butterflies
can fly
2,500
miles
(4,000
km) on
migration
every
year.

TAKE A LOOK


In addition to no
backbones, invertebrates
also have no true jaws.

Garden
snail

Earthworm

Tenebrionid beetle

110

Crab with
pincers raised
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