No. Primates are a group of placental mammals, but there are many placental mammals that are not primates.
Yes, primates are placental mammals
Yes, primates are placental mammals
Lemurs are primates, which are placental mammals. This means they give birth the same way humans do.
Yes, they are placental mammals. Most mammals are placental. The other two options are marsupial mammals (mammals with a pouch) and monotreme mammals (mammals that lay eggs).
yes
They are primates, a group that includes apes and monkeys.Humans are large, terrestrial, omnivorous, bipedal, social, placental mammals. Order Primates, Family Hominidae, Genus Homo, Species Homo Sapiens.
No, and they are not related in any way. Sugar gliders are marsupials, of the possum family (which are not the same as opossums). Monkeys are placental mammals, and primates.
No. Mammals are divided into three infraclasses: monotremes, marsupials, and placental mammals. A giraffe is a placental mammal. This means that the baby is born live, and that it is born developed enough that it will not have to immediately crawl onto the mother's nipple and attach itself. In fact, baby giraffes can walk seconds after being born.
Terrestrial placental mammals do have fur or hair. Marine placental mammals do not.
placental mammals are the most famous mammals
Most mammals are placental...marsupial mammals and monotremes are not placental.
Yes. Shrews are placental mammals.