No.
Green algae live in the hollow hair of sloths, making it green.
Tree sloths, Three-Toed Sloths, and Green Sloths are the most prominent sloths in the Amazon Jungle. Other sloths also but mostly those sloths in jungles
Sloths can sometimes appear green due to algae that grows on their fur. This algae acts as camouflage, helping sloths blend into their surroundings of green leaves in the rainforest. The green coloration also provides some level of UV protection for the sloth's fur.
No. All sloths are placental mammals.
Sloths are mammals and all mammals have bones.
sloths adapted to the tropical rain forest because green algae grows on their fur which camouflages them.
Because they have an algae growing in their fur.
three toed sloths
yesYes. A sloth is a mammal. It has fur and it feeds its young on mothers' milk.
green alga grows on it and that makes it camouflage.
Previous answer: "Green algae grows on sloths fur because they have beetles in their fur." Actually, the fur of most sloths is host to two species of symbiotic cyanobacteria, which may enhance their camouflage in their environment.[1][2] Because of the cyanobacteria, sloth fur is a small ecosystem of its own, hosting many species of non-parasitic insects.
A vertebrate, since sloths are mammals and all mammals are vertebrates.