Mammals have few similarities to amphibians as compared to the number of differences between them. However, some similarities include:
1. Both, as adults, breathe oxygen.
2. Both have spines and endoskeletons.
3. Both have bilateral symmetry.
4. Both have many internal organs in common, such as bones, muscles, brains, hearts, lungs, kidneys, bladders*, livers, tracheae, gall bladders, esophagi, stomachs, and intestines.
5. Both are tetrapods, but some species of both classes (e g whales, caecilians) have lost some of their limbs.
*The bladders of amphibians are usually not connected to the urinary ducts. They are in a pocket in the cloaca.
1. All are vertebrates with the basic systems (e g digestive system).
2. All, as adults, breathe air through lungs.
3. All, as adults, can live on land.
4. Some members of each class have four legs.
amphibians can come in and out of water,so they are sort of alike.
They are all vertebrates, most of which are four-legged, that, as adults, breathe oxygen on land.
they are all creaters
papa papa ratzie
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Neither...They were reptiles. dinosaurs were nether amphibians or mammals they were all reptiles, though they are more closely related to birds.
MAMMALS,reptiles,birds,amphibians and fish all have something in common. they have a backbone
Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
possums are BOTH! mammals ARE animals! all mammals, reptiles, and amphibians and so on are ALL animals.
No! Fish, reptiles, birds, and amphibians all have backbones, but are not mammals.
Yes, there would be mammals that eat all of those.
Fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds, and mammals are all vertebrates. They all have a backbone and internal bones.
Yes. Birds, amphibians, mammals, and reptiles are all animals.
All mammals, aves(birds), reptiles, amphibians and pisces(fishes).
All reptiles, amphibians, birds and mammals are desert vertebrates.
All tetrapodes , mammals , birds , reptiles and amphibians .
Ultimately all organisms are related. Humans are mammals, which are not closely related to reptiles. Mammals and reptiles belong to a group of animals called amniotes, which they also share with birds. Amniotes include all land vertebrates except amphibians. The last common ancestor of mammals and reptiles lived over 300 million years ago in the Carboniferous period. Shortly after the first amniotes branched off from amphibians they split into synapsids, which became the ancestors of mammals, and sauropsids, which became the ancestors of birds and all modern reptiles.