A giraffe cares for it's young in many ways. This includes bathing them and nursing them. They also protect their young from predators.
All mammals, including giraffes, care for their young. They have to be fed milk by their mother and are protected until they are old enough to be alone.
beautiful
yes
Evil young babies
Giraffes have hair because they are mammals. That's part of the definition. Mammals have fur or hair, they give birth to live young, and they feed their young milk.
male - Bull female - Cow young - Calf
adult giraffe take leaf from the trees then feed it to their young giraffe
For a cheetah it is a cub and for a giraffe it is a calf.
No, they do not. Giraffes are herbivores, not cannibals. They eat leaves and shoots of trees and shrubs, as well as climbers, vines and some herbs.
No. At one point, it was thought that giraffes were deaf and mute. But giraffes snort when alarmed, mothers whistle to their young, and the young bleat. At this point, researchers tend to describe giraffe hearing as at least on par with human. But more research needs to be done. One area of investigation's infrasound, or hearing by processing sound waves and vibrations.
When a giraffe is young, it stays with its parents. Adult giraffes live alone but sometimes they go together as a group to eat.
Yes, a zebra does "breast feed" after a fashion. Zebras are mammals and therefore, nurse their young just as horses or cattle do.