Yes, giraffes have eyelashes. They are very long and help protect their eyes from sand and the small piece of bark and wood that fall of the trees as they eat. Their eyelashes also help to shade the eye from the sun too.
Giraffes do indeed have eyelashes.
Like humans, the purpose of the giraffe's eyelashes is to protect the eyes from debris and dust in the air.
For example, when giraffes forage from trees, there are pieces of bark, vegetation and bugs which come loose, but the eyelashes protect the giraffe's eyes from these.
Yes Ostriches have feathers; they are birds.
An Ostrich is not a mammal, therefore it does not have any hair.
To protect their eyes from the sand and sunlight.
Ostriches have long leg and neck..and supposedly also long eyelashes..if you can catch one and hold it without injuring....oneself.
no they do not
Yes giraffes do have eyelashes
Yes
Yes.
No. Birds to not have eyelashes.
I do not think most mammals have eyelashes.
The medical term for eyelashes is eyelashes. Madarosis is the loss of eyelashes.
Rattlesnakes do not have eyelashes.
Animals do have eyelashes, and they do not have eyebrows because they usually already have hair on their faces. Harp Seal pups do if you look at there eyes there are black eyebrows above them. Do an image search to see for youself and just to see the cute animals. Have fun!
The possessive form of the plural noun eyelashes is eyelashes'.Example: Her eyelashes' length is natural, you can tell by her baby photos.
Yes, horses have eyelashes.
Yes, like all hairs on the body eyelashes grow, then stop growing, then fall out and then are replaced with new eyelashes.
Yes she has had so many false eyelashes she has none of her own eyelashes left. She has to stick the false eyelashes to her skin!
Of course her eyelashes are real, but she is seen sometimes wearing fake eyelashes.
Yes, eyelashes can regenerate.
there eyelashes are a meter long