Nope. Bats and Humans are phyylum Chordata *i.e. we have spinal chords). Bees on the other hand are phylum Insecta. Humans and bats are lots closer.
They are not THAT closely related; bats are mammals, not birds. Both mammals and birds are vertebrate animals.
Yes. We have a common ancestor. Our arm bone is like the bats wing bone
Not unless the bats feel threatened by the humans.
No but some bats have rabbies
No
They are not THAT closely related; bats are mammals, not birds. Both mammals and birds are vertebrate animals.
Bats and bears . . . they're both mammals. A bird isn't.
Yes. We have a common ancestor. Our arm bone is like the bats wing bone
Which other mammals are related to the bats?While bats are highly specialized for flight, they share anatomical characters with the Insectivora, the mammalian taxon that includes shrews and moles. These characters, however, are probably symplesiomorphies, fundamental to mammals as a whole, and not indicating a close relationship between bats and insectivorans. Bats are thought to be related most closely to the Dermoptera, a small order of mammals (two species) which includes the colugos or "flying lemurs" of the Phillippines. Colugos do not fly, but can glide using a web of skin stretched between their arms and legs, rather like flying squirrels (to which they are not closely related). Perhaps surprisingly, bats are also related to the Primates, the mammal taxon that includes lemurs, monkeys, apes, and humans; and to the Scandentia, the Asian tropical tree shrews. All these mammals are sometimes classified together in one large taxon, the Archonta. Find out more about bats and how they relate to other mammals at the Tree of Life site.
Bats DO have bellybuttons in the sense that there is an area where the placenta was attached in the womb. In humans, it's super obvious and leaves a big scar. In other animals, you often can't see it unless you look very closely. Bats are generally furry, and small, and if you got the chance to examine one closely, you probably could see the "belly button" where the placenta was once attached.
Bats DO have bellybuttons in the sense that there is an area where the placenta was attached in the womb. In humans, it's super obvious and leaves a big scar. In other animals, you often can't see it unless you look very closely. Bats are generally furry, and small, and if you got the chance to examine one closely, you probably could see the "belly button" where the placenta was once attached.
Not unless the bats feel threatened by the humans.
Bats are in their own family of mammals. As mammals they are more closely related to cats and dogs than they are to birds.
No but some bats have rabbies
no
No
Examples of similar features that evolved through convergent evolution include wings in birds and bats, camera-like eyes in vertebrates and cephalopods, and thorns in cacti and rose bushes. These traits evolved independently in different lineages in response to similar selective pressures, resulting in functional similarities despite genetic differences.