Primates such as monkeys, apes, or chimpanzees have fingerprints.
A lesser-known fact is that the koala of Australia has unique and distinct fingerprints as well, and these fingerprints are considered very similar to those of a human.
human being and elephants
No. No two tigers have the same pattern. They are analogous to human finger prints.
A raccoon's paw print looks a lot similar to a human's. It has a palm print, five finger looking prints, and five nails.
Their noses are unique to each individual, so they can be identified by their noses. The wrinkles around gorillas' noses are called nose prints and are unique for each individual, much like a human's finger prints.
Of course dogs have different paw prints. Just think about it, every dog is different in size and different breads have different legs. Therefore, no dog would be the same. I have 3 dogs, of different breads and they all have different paw prints.
It is an impression left by the friction of ridges of a human finger.
No human fingerprint is the same.
ytiger skin protects the tiger but human prints are just some prints of humanns.
No, every living human with fingers has a different finger print , even twins.
First things first, that question did not make sense. And yes,tiger stripes are like human finger prints. Each and every tiger has a different stripes,as each and every human has different finger prints.
If you are asking if ears are different for every human then yes. They are as identifiable as finger prints and are used in the UK as such.
human being and elephants
About 65% of human finger prints are loops, with right slant loops most common on the right hand and left slant loops on the left hand. Roughly 35% of finger prints are whorls, and the remaining (about 5%) are arches.
No. No two tigers have the same pattern. They are analogous to human finger prints.
no vegatarians are actually not human. they dont even have fingers to leave prints with. end of story.
they have figure prints.. like dogs have paw prints.
Finger prints (and toe prints) are for much more than identifying people, they actually help with gripping with the hands, palms, toes and soles.