yes
Wild animals care for their young ones with great love, sometimes a little more then us humans.
warm blooded animals usually have more flesh, and live on land. cold blooded animals are things like fish etc. that live in water
As mammals, zebras are warm-blooded animals. See link below, for more...
Both. Birds and mammals make up the warm-blooded group, whereas the reptiles, amphibians, and insects make up the cold-blooded group.
Warm blooded animals don't have to wait until it's warm to move around, because they create their own heat. Cold blooded animals, like snakes, must get their temperature up first before they can go about their daily business.
Warm blooded animals have internal mechanisms that regulate their body temperature, making them less dependent on the ambient temperature. Cold blooded animals do not have this mechanism and so are more directly influenced by the temperature of the space around them. A warm blooded animal can be highly active in the cold, but requires much more food to maintain such an active metabolism. Cold blooded animals slow down in the cold and become more active when it is warm. Their slower metabolism requires less food, so they can go for longer between meals.
Because warm blooded animals create thier own heat, hence in order to dessipitate the heat they eat more, in comparison to the cold blooded ones, as a result of which the heat is used up in the metabolisation of the food. However, the cold blooded animals take up heat from the surroundings and hence can regulate what amount of heat they actually require.
In hot environments, cold-blooded animals can have blood that is much warmer than warm-blooded animals. Cold-blooded animals are much more active in warm environments and are very sluggish in cold environments. This is because their muscle activity depends on chemical reactions which run quickly when it is hot and slowly when it is cold. A cold-blooded animal can convert much more of its food into body mass compared with a warm-blooded animal. INFO FOUND: http://coolcosmos.ipac.caltech.edu/image_galleries/ir_zoo/coldwarm.html
Warm blooded animals have internal mechanisms that regulate their body temperature, making them less dependent on the ambient temperature. Cold blooded animals do not have this mechanism and so are more directly influenced by the temperature of the space around them. A warm blooded animal can be highly active in the cold, but requires much more food to maintain such an active metabolism. Cold blooded animals slow down in the cold and become more active when it is warm. Their slower metabolism requires less food, so they can go for longer between meals.
Snakes are cold blooded any they do lay eggs. Also alligators and lizards are cold bloods who both lay eggs. More examples are turtles, tortoises, fish, and crocodilles. If you are wondering what they call cold-blooded, egg laying animals, they are called ectothrems.
Cholesterol is found in both warm and cold blooded animals. If you're talking about membranes, cholesterol is used to maintain the fluidity of the cell membrane. In cold blooded animals the change in temperature in the seasons causes the animal to store more cholesterol in the membrane causing it to be more fluid during colder seasons which prevent it from literally turning to ice hard and break.
No. I think you're thinking of cold hearted-- but even that's just a saying. Warm blooded animals can be cruel and cold can be too, it doesn't matter their blood.