Mammal.
All mammals feed their young on mothers' milk. This is the defining characteristic of a mammal, and it is a characteristic not shared with any other vertebrate.
Mammals include placental mammals, marsupials and monotremes (egg-laying mammals).
Lactating.
Not all vertabrates do, only mammals produce milk for offspring.
No, only mammals produce milk for its young.
Yes, Llamas do produce milk for their young. They typically produce 60 ml of milk at the time that she gives birth.
No. Only mammals produce milk for their young. The only birds that produce milk are pigeons.
first kakantutin mo ung leopard tapos mag kaka anak kyo lalabas sa pekpek nung nanay ung baby nioAll mammals (including all types of cats) give birth to live, placental young and produce milk to feed them. They also are warm-blooded vertebrates with hair or fur.All mammals (including all types of cats) give birth to live, placental young and produce milk to feed them. They also are warm-blooded vertebrates with hair or fur.
Horses and ponies are mammals - they have fur, give birth to live young and feed the young with milk. Mammals are all vertebrates with an internal skeleton.
MammalsAll mammals feed their young on mothers' milk, but there is one group of mammals known as monotremes which actually lay eggs. The platypus and echidna are both egg-laying mammals.
Yes, all mammals are warmblooded vertebrates.Yes, all mammals are warm blooded vertebrates. So are birds. The difference between birds and mammals is that birds have feathers and lay eggs, while most mammals give birth to live young, and all mammals have hair and produce milk for their young.
milk
You'd have to give birth to young first before you produce or leak milk.
The most obvious way in which mammals differ from the other four classes of vertebrates is that mammals nurture their young on mothers' milk.
yes