this is called replacement
Usually, yes, but there are exceptions. For example, baleen whales have teeth as embryos, lose them, and never replace them. Anteaters, pangolins, and echidnas never have teeth. No mammals replace their teeth twice during their lives.
The lion lives in Africa and is called the king of the beasts.
honestly, it depends on where it lives and how it lives.
whale?
A mosquito that lives off the blood of mammals and birds is an example of parasitism. They are biting insects that feed on blood.
A honeybee lives in a beehive in which they constructed. No, honeybees are not mammals, they are insects.
The bamboo forest, with water, stream, fishes, and small mammals such as mice live where the Giant Panda lives. And other Pandas!
Mammals give milk to their young, have some type of hair sometime in their lives, breathe air, and do not have feathers or gills.
it lives in mammals such as pigs,rats,and humans etc.
http://www3.nbnet.nb.ca/maryspt/mammals/NBmammals.html
Beavers are mammals that live near or in ponds.
There are none: the continent is too cold to support any kind of wildlife. However, several types of birds and some sea mammals can be seen during breeding season, when they come to the ice during this cycle of their lives.