Professional Researcher's Encyclopaedia

Knowledge is only a click away

Invertebrate - enyclopaedia article

Invertebrate

Summary: Invertebrate is a term coined by Chevalier de Lamarck to describe any animal without a backbone or vertebra, like insects, squids and worms. He divided them into two groups, the Insecta and the Vermes. However, the invertebrates are not a coherent group of animals, as many are much more closely related to vertebrates than to one another. This is one of the places where formal ...

read the full Invertebrate article

Buy Invertebrate related products:


Buy from Amazon.co.uk Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Electronics - Toys
Buy from Amazon.com Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Videogames - Software - Electronics - Photo - Toys
Buy from Amazon.ca Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Livres en Français
Buy from Amazon.de - - - - - - -
Buy from Amazon.fr - - - - -
Advanced Product Search (new):    uk    |     us    |     ca    |     de    |     fr

Invertebrate

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Invertebrate is a term coined by Chevalier de Lamarck to describe any animal without a backbone or vertebra, like insects, squids and worms.

He divided them into two groups, the Insecta and the Vermes. However, the invertebrates are not a coherent group of animals, as many are much more closely related to vertebrates than to one another.

This is one of the places where formal taxonomy and common usage diverge. People tend to think of "things like us" and "everything else." In a very broad sense, "vertebrates" are things like us as they have bones. Dividing the world into X and not-X is conceptually appealing and sometimes useful, even when the only thing the not-X have in common is that definition by exclusion. In this case, the excluded group, invertebrates, makes up 97% of animals in the world.

link to this article with the following HTML

 
This article is from Wikipedia. This article was up-to-date as of 8 May 2004 - See live article
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

This page is part of Professional Researcher
Web site design by Dean Marshall