A flamingo is a bird, so it has feathers.
There are many different outgrowths that can be found on animals skin. You can find fur, scales, claws, antlers, and needles for example.
There are some cases of poaching in the US. In California people hunted bears for their fur and claws. In Pennsylvania deer where hunted for their meat and/or antlers.
Yes, there is keratin in fur. There is also keratin in human hair, cow skin, feathers, hooves, horns, nails, beaks, claws, wool, teeth, and much, much more.
Fuzz on deer antlers are called velvet.
no
They're not horns. They're not antlers. The "bony things" on a giraffe's head are called "ossicones." They are growths formed from soft cartilage that has super hardened (ossified). They remain covered with skin and hair/fur, unlike the horns of deer and antelopes. Giraffes have 2 ossicones on top of their heads; those of the female are smaller than those of the male. It is with these "horns" that the giraffe can be sexed: Females have a tuft of fur atop of the horn, whereas the males horns are bald. Some males develop calcium deposits on top of their heads, creating an illusion of three or more horns. However, these are not true horns and giraffes always have 2 ossicones.
no, dogs don't have horns in general. they don't even the fur tufts called horns.
No. When antlers are in the growing stages they are covered in what is called felt, which is a skin covering over bone (which is what antlers are really made of). This felt contains blood vessels and nerves that help protect these growing antlers from being potentially damaged. Once the antlers have fully grown, the felt is shed.
Yes. Both sexes grow new antlers every year, underneath protective fur called velvet. When the antlers have finished growing, the velvet falls off. After the mating season, the antlers fall off.
Yes.
yes, it has both.