Yes, all mammals are warmblooded vertebrates.
Yes, all mammals are warm blooded vertebrates. So are birds. The difference between birds and mammals is that birds have feathers and lay eggs, while most mammals give birth to live young, and all mammals have hair and produce milk for their young.
Yes, all mammals are warm blooded vertebrates. So are birds. The difference between birds and mammals is that birds have feathers and lay eggs, while most mammals give birth to live young, and all mammals have hair and produce milk for their young.
Yes, all mammals are warmblooded vertebrates.
No because fishes are cold blooded.
mammals
Yes. All mammals are. Blue whales maintain a core body temperature somewhere between about 36.6 degrees C and 37.2 degrees C (98-99 degrees F). This temperature is similar to that of other large mammals.
they are warm blooded mammals are warmblooded.
The bilby is warm blooded. It is a mammal, and all mammals are warm blooded.
All dogs are warm blooded - they are mammals and all mammals are warm blooded.
Warm blooded. They are mammals, which feed breast milk. All mammals are warm blooded.
No, Koalas are warm blooded animals as they use endothermic methods to keep their body temperature at a constant rate. These methods include things such as sweating, shivering, panting and burning fat.
A bat is the only mammal that flies. All mammals are warm blooded.
They are a mammal. All mammals are warm blooded.
vertebrates which can maintain their body temperature and do not change their body temperature according to the external environment are called as warm blooded animals such as mammals and birds:.)
All dogs are warm blooded - they are mammals and all mammals are warm blooded.
Bird and mammals are the only two groups of vertebrates which are warm blooded. Amphibians, reptiles and fish, the other vertebrate groups, are all cold-blooded.