Planets are in the solar system comprising the universe. Mammals live ON a planet, like on this planet Earth.
Yes, all mammals have a skeleton.Yes, all mammals have a skeleton.Yes, all mammals have a skeleton.Yes, all mammals have a skeleton.Yes, all mammals have a skeleton.Yes, all mammals have a skeleton.
Mammals. Mammals.
Milk, the secretion of glands of mammals, does not contribute significantly to growth of planets. The rate at which fully formed planets grow by the time they might be populated with mammals would be so trivial to be considered insignificant. However, planets do continue to attract interstellar dust from space through gravitational pull and thus marginally increase in mass over time, but again, the contribution of such gravitational pull from the combined mass of milk on the planet would be trivial. If one were to consider a different question of development and growth of organisms themselves, which reside on a planet capable of sustaining life, such as Earth, then milk could be deemed to have a significant contribution.
Mammals Have Hair Or Fur, Non-Mammals Don't.
We are mammals, and mammals are one category of animal, so we are both animals and mammals.
yes, badgers are mammals
Sharks are NOT mammals.
No, all sea animals are not mammals. Fishes are not mammals, but dolphins are mammals.
Most Australian mammals are marsupials unlike American mammals.
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).
No. Planets orbit suns, while moons orbit planets. Planets do not orbit planets.
They are not mammals