reptiles don't do much depending on the species but are great pets!
a body full of scales.
If you mean "reptiles" there isn't one. Reptiles are a specifically defined group of animals. There is no other word which means the same thing.
yes you can find mongoose all over the caribean eating birds, reptils[snakes] eggs,berries,fruits,vedgetabels,and dead things
All animals in the reptile, fish and amphibian group fits this description.
Yes. There are 15 species of snakes in Oregon, including the gopher snake, rubber boa, kingsnake, garter snake, and western rattlesnake. The western rattler is the only venomous snake in the state.
reptiles are made of scale,scute,or shell and all reptile are cold-blooded(you can see their cold-blooded because they need to bask on heat source to gain heat) and most reptile don't care for their young and most reptiles don't give birth to live young
More than 95 percent of animals are invertebrates,or animals that doesn't have backbone.And vertebrate just have few,like,jawless fish,bony fish,cartilage,amphibians,birds,reptils,and mammals.So you can see that killer whales are mammals.The answer of your question is the killer whales are vertebrate.
No, dolphins are mammals.
Fish, sharks, octopuses, starfish, seahorses, stingrays, frogs, water bugs, eels, water snakes, manatees, etc. There's a million things that live in water!
That depends on your definition of "strange". Any behavior that an animal expresses is due to the underlying evolutionary cause; however, "strange" behavior can be an indication of disease or illness.
SIMILARITIES. Birds, reptiles, and mammals are all a part of the animal kingdom! (OH MY GOSH!) They all need the same things- food, water, vitamins, nutrients, and things of the such. They are all multi-cellular, eukaryotic organisms. They all have the ability to mate and raise/have offspring. These three also all have similar body parts, and body functions. DIFFERENCES. Mammals give birth to live offspring- birds and some reptiles don't and lay eggs. Birds have the ability of flight- mammals and most reptiles do not. Reptiles are covered in scales or some other form of rough 'coat'- birds have feathers (though some like the Cassowary have some rough and slightly scaly napes and such), and mammals have fur and things of the such. Reptiles and most birds are warm blooded- mammals are cold blooded. Hope it helped! :D ~AP Wulf
Robert C. Stebbins has written: 'Western Reptiles and Amphibians' 'Animal coloration' -- subject(s): Color, Animals 'Natural history of the salamanders of the plethodontid genus Ensatina' -- subject(s): Ensatina 'Amphibians of western North America' -- subject(s): Amphibians 'Connecting with nature' -- subject(s): Ecology, Activity programs, Nature, Environmental education, Nature study, Philosophy, Effect of human beings on, Study and teaching, Outdoor life, Natural history, Human ecology, Biography, Naturalists 'A natural history of amphibians' -- subject(s): Amphibians 'Amphibians and reptils of western North America' -- subject(s): Reptiles, Amphibians 'A field guide to western reptiles and amphibians' -- subject(s): Identification, Reptiles, Amphibians 'Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians'