Thursday, July 30, 2009

what kind of animals are mammals?


Answers:
They breast feed their young or in the case of the duck billed platypus it secretes milk from its sweat glands because it doesn't have breasts or nipples(the exception to the rule,it also lays eggs rather than give birth.)
By definition, warm blooded.
red hot mamals do your own homework!
Erm, which mammals? It's a large group, including us!
Have hair, produce milk, give birth to live young.
bears, cats, dogs, lions, whales
mammals are warm-blooded and they give natural births like humans. and humans are also mammals.
Mammals are warm-blooded (endothermic), have hair (or fur). But the main distinction is they breast feed their young.
warm blooded animal
THE members of the ciass of mammals differ from all other c1asses in the animal kingdom in that the young are nourished on milk pro颅duced by the mother's mammary glands. The young are usually born fully formed; and the majority of them are covered with hair or fur; all are warm-blooded.
Have hair.. babies grow inside the female whom then produces milk to fed the young
Mammals:Any warm-blooded vertebrate having the skin more or less covered with hair; young are born alive except for the small subclass of monotremes and nourished with milk
The main way to define mammals is that they give birth to live young. Most if not all other animals lay eggs instead.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/mammals.
mammals are animals that give birth to live young.
warm blooded and have hair/fur all over there body, and can't live under water.
War blooded animals that produce eggs inside them not on the out side
the ones that get pregnant and breast feed their kids
Mammals include humans, dogs, cats, dolphins, whales, apes, monkeys, horses, cows, elephants and a whole lot of other mammals too.

Mammals are warm blooded.
Mammals do not lay eggs they are like humans and carry their young in the womb.
Any of various warm-blooded vertebrate animals of the class Mammalia, including humans, characterized by a covering of hair on the skin and, in the female, milk-producing mammary glands for nourishing the young.
Warm blooded
Mammals produce milk and give birth to live young, rather than lay eggs.

No comments:

Post a Comment