No, not in a straight forward traditional classification sense...
Amphibians = class Amphibia
Reptiles = class Reptilia
Bird = class Aves
Mammals = class Mammalia
They can be categorized all together in the "superclass" Tetrapoda.
Reptiles, birds, mammals, and amphibians are all in the group called Tetrapoda (or tetrapods). Tetrapoda means "four legs." Some tetrapods (like snakes or whales) no longer have four limbs, but because of their ancestry they are still grouped as tetrapods.
Amphibians are broken up into different classes, making it impossible for all amphibians to be in the same class.
None of the above. They are given their own class.
birds are a whole class in themselves. birds reptiles mammals amphibians fish
If you define 'type' as 'class', there are mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles, and fish in Wyoming's wildlife.
Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals. Vertebrate means animals with a backbone!
Yes. Piranhas are fish, and all fish are vertebrates. Vertebrates include mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians.
The biological groupings that follow the kingdom are phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species in the system of classification known as taxonomy. Each group represents organisms that share increasingly specific characteristics.
penguins are neither mammals or reptiles. penguins lay eggs.
Class reptilia and amphibia both belong to the superclass tetrapoda in the phylum chordata. Mammals and birds are tetrapods as well.
Reptiles, amphibians and fish are all cold-blooded vertebrates.
If you define 'type' as 'class', there are mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles, and fish in Wyoming's wildlife. So, there are 4 classes of wildlife in Wyoming.
birds are a separate class by themselves animals with backbones are either birds, fish, mammals, reptiles, or amphibians they are neither mammals or amphibians thery are birds their own class of chordates
Class Agnatha (jawless fish)Class Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes)Class Osteichthyes (bony fishes)Class Amphibia (amphibians)Class Reptilia (reptiles)Class Aves (birds)Class Mammalia (mammals)