chicken
Yes, of course they have bones. All mammals have bones and hamsters are mammals. They have hair, feed milk to their young, an they are warm blooded! They need bones to move around! Without bones, they would just be a furry blob.
in the womb, jaguars are placental mammals.
fluuckck you science
Yes, mammals have bones.
All young mammals develop in the amniotic sac of their mother. For example, a human fetus develops in the mother's womb. Which is an anmiotic sac.
Both humans and bats are mammals because both have hair, produce milk for their young, and have the three small bones in the ear that only mammals have.
Birds have feathers and light hollow bones. Mammals have fur or hair and heavy bones. Bird have a gizzard to break down food. Mammals only need a stomach. Birds lay eggs. Mammals give birth to live young.
Sloths are mammals and all mammals have bones.
Yes, both marsupials and placental mammals develop their young partly within their bodies in a uterus. However, the key difference lies in the duration and nature of this development. In placental mammals, the young are nourished through a complex placenta for a longer gestational period, while marsupials give birth to relatively undeveloped young that continue to grow and develop in a pouch after birth.
No, opossums are marsupials. The young develop in the mother's pouch.
anything that has young that develop in an amniotic sack: reptiles, birds, and mammals
No, amphibians do not feed their young with milk. Some amphibians lay eggs that the young, called tadpoles, hatch from and then develop on their own without parental care.