Milk teeth would, by definition only occur in mammals, since mammals are the only animals that produce milk for their young.
Other animals may well have a set of deciduous teeth that are replaced by adult teeth as they mature.
no, mammals are not the only ones with teeth, there is also alligators and crocs, sharks, dolphins, some fish.Another way to read the question is - do mammals have teeth only?The answer is no - some mammals have just a long, sticky tongue for catching ants and termites. Echidnas, for example, do not have teeth. Some mammals such as the platypus have grinding plates instead of teeth.
Yes. Mammals are the only animals that feeds milk to their young.
Mammals have fur or hair and nurse their young with milk. They also have a four-chambered heart as well as a variety of specialized teeth types.
No, only mammals (of whom have mammary glands) are able to produce milk.
The babies don't have teeth so they can't chew food so they drink milk
No. Only mammals do.
Mammals are the only creatures to feed their young on mother's milk.
no because only mammals drink milk
Amphibians do not feed their young milk. Only mammals do that.
No. Only mammals produce milk.
yes, pigs are mammals and all mammals drink milk from their mother
No. The only group of animals that suckled milk from the mother are mammals. Octopuses are not mammals, nor even vertebrates.