The Scorpion body segments are grouped into regions, or tagmata, consisting of the anterior cephalothorax, or prosoma, and the posterior abdomen, or opisthosoma. The abdomen is further divisible into a wide anterior preabdomen or mesosoma) and a narrow, posterior postabdomen or metasoma).
Thirty-three quadrillion, three hundred thirty-three trillion, three hundred thirty-three billion, three hundred thirty-three million, three hundred thirty-three thousand, three hundred thirty-three hundred-quadrillionths.
A triangle has three sides and three angles.
Three and three fourths plus three is six and three fourths.
three is prime nine equals three times three
Head, Thorax, And Abdomen
Head, Thorax, And Abdomen
head, thorax, and abdomen
In arthropods, the fused segments are called tagmata. These are specialized body regions that are made up of multiple segments fused together to perform specific functions. Examples of tagmata include the head, thorax, and abdomen in insects.
The segments of an animal body are often put together into functional groups known as tagmata. The contents of these groups vary by species and, depending on what they contain, they have specific names. Some tagmata groups form a thorax, some form cephalothoraxes, and others still make up heads and abdomens.
All insects are animals. However, a spider is not an insect. Spiders are in a class called Arachnids. All insects have a pair of antennae, 6 legs, and 3 main body parts (tagmata): the head, thorax, and abdomen. Spiders have no antennae, 8 legs, and 2 tagmata: the cephalothorax and the abdomen.
The Scorpion body segments are grouped into regions, or tagmata, consisting of the anterior cephalothorax, or prosoma, and the posterior abdomen, or opisthosoma. The abdomen is further divisible into a wide anterior preabdomen or mesosoma) and a narrow, posterior postabdomen or metasoma).
Tough but flexible chitinous exoskeleton providing protection and aid against dessication, and segmentation into specialized groups called tagmata for division of labor such as food handling, sensory appendages, and locomotion appendages
All insects are animals. However, a spider is not an insect. Spiders are in a class called Arachnids. All insects have a pair of antennae, 6 legs, and 3 main body parts (tagmata): the head, thorax, and abdomen. Spiders have no antennae, 8 legs, and 2 tagmata: the cephalothorax and the abdomen.
insects come under phylum Arthropoda they are only one of the two taxa adapted for dry terrestrial environment they are capable of flight. they are charecterised by metamerism chitinous exoskeleton and jointed appendages. they are classified into three sub phyla base don the number of tagmata and habitat and number of appendages moreover the name itsekf indicates the jointed legs and type of food habbit whether it is omnivore or carnivore or detritivorous
Arthropod is a really general classification; it's a phylum, man, there are a whole lot of disparate critters that fall under this category. From wikipedia: "An arthropod is an invertebrate animal having an exoskeleton (external skeleton), a segmented body, and jointed appendages."
The Arachnid class of arthropods under subphylum Chelicerata have only two major body sections (tagmata) called the cephalothorax and abdomen; they also usually have eight legs as adults, and no wings nor antennae.