Bats can fly.
Yes. Bats are the only mammals capable of free flight. they are quite different from the various species of gliders and other gliding mammals, which cannot actually fly.
Bats are mammals not birds, although they share some avian characteristics. They are the only mammals that can truly fly. The "flying squirrel" and gliding possum can glide for short distances, but they don't flap their wings and fly like a bat.
The bat is a mammal and does not have an exoskeleton. It has an internal skeleton the same as other mammals do. You will find exoskeletons on insects.
Yes, bats are mammals
the bat does not have a group.There is so many bat species andall of them are different so man kind decided to ban bat species but they wont live with out groups.so no they don't have one.
no,they are mammals!
All mammals that can fly are descended from the ancestors of bats. They have special bones and other physical adaptations. The flying fox of Australia is a type of bat. Other mammals such as the "flying squirrel" are actually just jumping and gliding.
Yes. The flying fox is a type of bat (a fruit bat), and all bats are mammals.
The bat is the only mammal that has 'true' flight. All other 'flying' mammals are gliders.
Yes, bats are mammals.
The longest known lifespan of a bat in the wild is 30 years for a little brown bat. Bats live longer then other mammals there size.
Fur on the body and a skin between the bones of the wings.