mammals are a air breathing animals, Just like humans, they grow the same way as we do but they eat different food. Live in a different places, live in different enviorments. And im sure they look different to us, well i hope so anyway. Us humans are mammals, how do you think we grow?
^^
to who ever wrote this im pretty sure humans ARE mammals
Most mammals develop within the mother's abdomen and are fully formed but are dependent upon the mother for protection and nourishment.
However, the group of mammals known as marsupials give birth to live offspring which spend very little time inside the mother's body. The young must finish developing in a special pouch.
There is a third group, known as monotremes, which comprise only three recognised species, and these are the egg-laying mammals.
Mammals grow and develope by eating like us humans, each yera they grow and age
mammals develop by placental mammals, monotremes, and marsupials
Horses are like most mammals (humans, too) and the unborn develop in a uterus.
yes the reptiles develop in eggs
Most mammals are placental mammals: they develop in a placenta before birth. Marsupials also develop in a placenta, but they are delivered much earlier and the placenta is less developed. Monotremes develop within an egg, which is kept inside the mother for some time before it is laid. It hatches several days later.
Placental mammals and marsupials develop in a placenta within the uterus before being delivered. Monotremes develop in an egg.
They did not. Mammals evolved independently of birds.
Most mammals give birth to live young, but not all do. A few Australian marsupials, such as the duck-billed platypus and echidna, lay eggs.
chicken
yes. there mammals.
There are three types of mammal based on how their young develop. There are marsupials, which develop in a marsupium(pouch). An example of a marsupial is the kangaroo. Another kind mammal development is in an egg. Egg-laying mammals are limited to the duck-billed platypus and the spiny echidna. The final type of mammal development is development in the womb. Most mammals fall under this category, including humans.
Oviparous -- reproduction by eggs that develop outside the body -- birds, most reptiles Viviparous -- reproduction via live birth where offspring develop inside the mother's body -- human, most mammals
fluuckck you science
Mammals are warm-blooded vertebrates.They have a covering of skin or hair/fur.All mammals suckle their young with mothers' milk.The young of most mammals are born alive, except for monotremes - the platypus and echidna - which lay eggs.There are three main groups of mammals: placental, marsupial and monotreme. Monotremes are the egg-laying mammals. Marsupials are characterised by giving birth to undeveloped young which, in most species, must then develop in a pouch.