Bears do have opposable thumbs. Some bears have a special bone found in their wrists. Its their sixth toe and it is an opposable thumb. It is used for grasping bamboo. They use this bone in the same way humans use their thumbs, mainly for grasping food. Most species do not have opposable thumbs.
Polar bears do not have opposable thumbs. Opposable thumbs are able to bend so it can touch the other digits on the hand or foot. This feature is a signature to primates.
Yes, they do have thumbs on their hands and feet.
Well no bears have paws not thumbs
no
Humans (with opposable thumbs) can grasp, carry and grip things that other animals including primates (who lack opposable thumbs) cannot.
The chimpanzee does have thumbs. But they are not opposable.
Opposable thumbs are use to holding on and pick up small objects. The macaques use their opposable thumbs to hold the tool to use it. Without opposable thumbs it could be hard or nearly impossible to use a tool to get food.
when you see a whale you think it doesn't have fingers. whereas, underneath their flippers are five finger-structured bones exactly like fingers but on a fish. that is why they are called tetrapods.
No besides us apes are the only ones who have opposable thumbs but ours are better
No, raccoons do not have opposable thumbs.
No, They Don't have an opposable thumb But a chimpanzee does!
No, mice do not have opposable thumbs. They have paws with a pollex, which is the innermost digit of the forelimb.
Basically, opposable thumbs are important to help us, primates, and panda bears, help grip things better, pick things up, and eat with one hand.We need opposable thumbs to do..well...to do almost everything!
No. Unlike primates, most marsupials do not have opposable thumbs. The exception to this is the koala, which is a marsupial (not a bear). Both their front and rear feet can grasp things using opposable thumbs. The opossum of North America, also a marsupial, has opposable thumbs.
Yes they do, their thumbs are just so high up that they cant use them.
Primates