Polar bears give live birth.
Polar bears are mammals and give live birth.
Polar bears do not lay eggs: they give birth to live young, which is why they are called mammals, not birds or reptiles.
Polar bears are mammals. Their eggs get as far as the womb (uterus), but don't get outside the body unless they are discarded due to being not fertilised. Basically no..polar bears don't lay eggs...they give live birth.
Polar bears, like all other placental mammals, give birth to live young and do not lay eggs. Therefor, polar bears do not hatch out of eggs.
Woodland caribou give live birth, they do not lay eggs.
they give birth to live young
Bears give birth to live young. They, like humans are placental mammals.
Yes. Polar bears are mammals- warm blooded animals with fur that give live birth, and nurse their babies with milk.
Nope... polar bears are mammals - they give birth to live young.
Around the age of four or five the female polar bear can start having babies. They usually only have two cubs and they have these babies in a cave they've dug in a large snow drift. They stay there over winter and come out in spring with the babies. The babies are much smaller than human babies when they're born. They are the size of a rat and weigh little more than a pound. They can grow to full man size in a year if they have lots of food. This is the source that I found it from. http://www.kidzone.ws/sg/polarbear/polar_bear.htm
polar bears have there young like us humans on earth and there called cubs when there babes
Both are mammals, give live birth, and don't lay eggs.