They can both regulate their own body temperature (endothermic).
Adaptations that birds and mammals share include the fact that they are both warm blooded, they are both vertebrates, and they both have four chambered hearts. Unlike mammals, birds are covered in feathers and all birds lay eggs. Unlike birds, mammals are covered in hair, produce milk for their young, and nearly all mammals give birth to live young (except a few species that lay eggs).
Birds an Mice share some of the characteristics like : i) They both eat grains. ii) they both are herbivorous , carnivorous and omnivorous.
They both breath with oxygen and protect their young.
Dinosaurs are more closely related to mammals. Both mammals and dinosaurs share a reptilian ancestor that they don't share with amphibians.
Both birds and mammals care for their young.
Birds and mammals both evolved from reptiles.
Mammals and birds are both vertebrates descended from an early reptilian ancestor.
Both birds and mammals are warm-blooded terrestrial vertebrates.
No. Mammals and birds are both vertebrates, particularly amniotes, but beyond this they are not relate to each other. They share a number of characteristics including:Warm bloodednessA high metabolic rateA four-Chambered heartA soft covering over their skincaring for their young.But Mammals and birds developed these traits separately.
Birds are neither reptiles nor mammals. They are a separate class of vertebrate animals called Aves. Birds share characteristics with both reptiles and mammals, but they have distinct features that set them apart, such as feathers, beaks, and laying eggs.
No. Birds and mammals are separate classes each containing hundreds of genera. Their closest connection is that both birds and mammals are amniotes, a group that also includes reptiles.
Bats are mammals. Owls are birds.