They are called ectotherms.
Donkey's are warm blooded. Cold blooded are animals like reptiles. Warm blooded are mammals. Think of it as Warm blooded animals give 'live' birth while cold blooded animals lay eggs (This excludes platypuses though- they're mammals but lay eggs. Why? I don't know)
Animals that are cold blooded. Polar Bears, Penguins and some seals
the mammals are a group of animals that give live birth, feed their young with milk, are warm-blooded, and have hair or fur
All cats are mammals and all mammals are warm blooded. They also all have fur and give birth to live young.
Coldblooded; plus they lay eggs not give birth to live young
No. All cold blooded animals (or the majority of them) lay eggs... Almost all mammals (warmblooded) do breast feed and give birth to live beings instead of lying eggs, though there are a few exceptions.
yes some animals do as far as i know. they use the fat in their bodies to produce body heat. e.g. horses use their own body heat to keep themselves warm.
Rabbits are warm blooded. A good give away is animals with fur are warm blooded. They have the fur to help keep the warmth in and the cold out.warm blooded or homeoethermic. ( internally heat-regulating, roughtly) All mammals are of this type.
an alligator is cold blooded, breathes air, and gives birth. oh, and rosie odonnell :D
Organisms are classified based on a number of different criteria. Animals that have hair, are warm-blooded, and give birth to live young are mammals. Those animals that are cold-blooded and lay eggs are amphibians or reptiles. Animals are also classified based on whether or not they have a backbone (vertebrates) or not. (invertebrates.)
Mammals: Are Warm-blooded (i.e. with an internal heat source and regulation), Are Viviparous - the Duck-billed Platypus and one or two other animals are warm-blooded but lay eggs, and strictly speaking belong to their own group, the monotremes, not mammals. Lactate - to feed their own young directly. Have hair, to greater or lesser extent depending on species and (in our species at least) sex. The birds are warm-blooded but are all oviparous, do not lactate and have feathers not hair - and are closer to reptiles than to mammals.
Probably yes, when a cold blooded animal such as a reptile (snake) lay their eggs they stay with them until the eggs have hatched and then off they go. While a warm blooded animals generally give live births (other than birds) they tend to stay with their young and care for them until they are old enough to take care of themselves.