Mammals produce milk with their mammary glands. We, as humans, have mammary glands used to produce milk for our babies. Hormones play a part as well.
Mammals produce milk to feed there young, unlike birds (which don't reproduce milk) find foods for their young and feed them. Hopefully this was helpful to you. :-)
Because the animal mothers have milk inside themselves and while the animals are small, they are not strong enough to eat the things that the adults eat.
Yes. All female mammals can produce milk to feed their young. That is the defining feature of a mammal.
Most baby animals can't eat what the parents do, and milk has lots of vital nutrients to help it grow.
As a general rule for the animal kingdom, only mammals produce milk. There are some exceptions for example there is a specie of insect that has milk patches
Yes. Even platypuses and echidnas (spiny anteaters).
The Mammary Glands.
Yes, they are mammals so they feed milk to their young.
no,birds feed their young with worms and insects.
Your question seems to suggest that mammals that feed milk to their young are a subset of mammals. But all mammals feed milk to their young. That, along with the presence of hair, is the defining characteristic of all mammals, without exceptions.
Rats are mammals. Mammals feed their Young on milk.
milk
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Yes. Mammals are the only animals that feeds milk to their young.
No. Only mammals do.
Do they have hair? Do they feed their young with milk? Yes, chinchillas are mammals because they feed their young with milk and they have lungs and fur.
Yes, bats are mammals and feed their young milk.