No. Mammals are divided into three infraclasses: monotremes, marsupials, and placental mammals. A giraffe is a placental mammal. This means that the baby is born live, and that it is born developed enough that it will not have to immediately crawl onto the mother's nipple and attach itself. In fact, baby giraffes can walk seconds after being born.
Primates include monkeys, apes, lemurs, and humans. Giraffes are even toed ungulates, not primates. Their closest living relatives are okapi, followed by deer, cattle, and antelope, and the close relatives of those animals.
No. Giraffes are placental mammals.
No. Giraffe are placental mammals.
The giraffe is a placental mammal.
No. Zebras are placental mammals.
no monkeys do not eat zebras they eat bananas
mega marsupials are dead and marsupials arent
No. Beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals.
Marsupials have fur.
There is no problem with marsupials.
No. Rabbits are not marsupials.
Of course they do! How would the zebra species still be 'alive' if the adult zebras didn't have baby zebras. Of course they have babies.
Zebras reproduce sexually, so zebras do have fathers.
Yes: quolls are marsupials. They are dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials, feeding on birds and smaller mammals.
Zebras are prey. Several other animals eat zebras, but zebras don't eat other animals.
No, there are no zebras in Wyoming. (Zebras are native to the African continent.)
Bilbies are marsupials. Rabbits are not.