Badgers are mammals.
No. Badgers are mammals.
Badgers are mammals and they give birth to live young.
Hedgehogs badgers rodents owls
Badgers are similar to mammals such as weasels and skunks. They are all burrowing mammals that have flat, elongated bodies.
No. Badgers are placental mammals, not marsupials, so they do not have pouches.
They have instinctive skills but are no smarter than other mammals and rodents.
Yes. All mammals have the same number of joints in their limbs, with a similar layout, and hence badgers have a joint that corresponds with humans' elbows.
Yes, they do, badger's are mammals and they nurse baby badgers
Yes, like all land mammals do. A badger is related to the weasel.
bats, bears, small mammals such as badgers... Animals that hibernate, mostly.
No. They are completely different types of mammals. Honey badges are placental mammals, while Tasmanian devils are marsupials.
Yes it is. Badgers have a wide variety of foods in their diet. They will eat earthworms, arthropods, mammals, birds, reptiles and even fish. They also eat cereals, fruits and seeds.