Yes. Anything with vertebrae will be classified as a vertebrate. There are exceptions where some animals have undergone a secondary loss of vertebrae. However, they are still classified as a vertebrate because they have a skull, and scientists have figured out that skulls were first derived from vertebrae.
Humans belong to the class mammalia of vertebrate.
Pigs belong to the class Mammalia, which is a group of warm-blooded vertebrate animals that have hair or fur, give birth to live young, and nurse their offspring with milk.
No, Class Mammalia contains only one phylum, which is Chordata. Mammals are vertebrate animals with hair or fur, mammary glands, and a neocortex region in the brain.
The monkey's vertebrate class like that of humans and other large animals is Mammalia. Mammalia are categorized as giving live birth, are warm blooded and chew their food instead of having to eat it whole.
A tiger belongs to the class Mammalia because it is a warm-blooded vertebrate that produces milk to nourish its young. This class includes all mammals, which are characterized by features such as hair/fur, mammary glands, and a four-chambered heart.
Yes it is because it has a spine. If it did not have a spine it would be an INvertebrate.
Yes, antelopes are vertebrates. They belong to the class Mammalia, meaning they have a backbone and are characterized by having a vertebral column.
A badger is a vertebrate. Vertebrates are animals that have a backbone or spinal column, and badgers belong to the class Mammalia, which includes all mammals. They are characterized by their skeletal structure, which includes a spine.
Elephants belong to the class Mammalia.
A bull belongs to the class Mammalia.
Kangaroos are mammals, so they are in the class mammalia. They are marsupials, and macropods.
Donkeys belong to the class Mammalia. More specifically, they belong to the order Perissodactyla. Within that order, they belong to the family Equidae.