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Oryx is a ruminant animal in Africa. It is an antelope species.
The peccary (which is a species of wild pig) is a non-ruminant like all other pigs.
No. Pigs are not ruminant; none of them chew cud.
Cattle, sheep, goats, deer, moose, all species of antelope, giraffes, camels, llamas, rhinocerouses, yaks, bison, buffalo, elk, reindeer, caribou, and muskox are some of many species that are all ruminants (or in your case, not non-ruminant or monogastric species.)
Cattle, sheep, goats, deer, moose, all species of antelope, giraffes, camels, llamas, rhinocerouses, yaks, bison, buffalo, elk, reindeer, caribou, and muskox are some of many species that are all ruminants (or in your case, not non-ruminant or monogastric species.)
The status of mammal or not doesn't depend on the individual. If a species belongs to the mammals, then all members of that species are mammals. So yes, Koko - like all gorillas - is a mammal.
The brown bear is indeed a mammal, as are all the bear species.
Rodents
Yes, all species of rhinoceroses are mammals.
A ruminant is an herbivorous mammal that has two stomachs. After chewing food, usually grass, they swallow it and it ferments in the first stomach. Then they regurgitate the food, which is now called cud, and chew it a second time, before swallowing it again, at which point the cud moves to the second stomach, where digestion continues. Most ruminants belong to the order Ruminantia, but not all of them do.
Yes, all species of seal are mammals.
The only native mammal is the Hoary bat. All other mammal species have been brought there by humans.