They give birth to live babies; they have hair or fur; they feed their young milk; they are warm-blooded; they have skeletons, and they breathe air.
They are mammals.
Yes. They are mammals.
Mammals.
An elephant is a mammal. All mammals are vertebrates. Therefore, the elephant is a vertebrate animal An elephant is a mammal. All mammals are vertebrates. Therefore, the elephant is a vertebrate animal
I am quite certain that Asian elephants are mammals just like the African forest elephants and African bush elephants. It just makes more sense that all of the types of elephants would be mammals like one another. And from pictures that have been seen asian elephants were born without being in an egg.
As elephants are mammals, and all mammals are vertabrates (ie. they have a backbone), then yes, they do indeed have a backbone.
Neither. Elephants are placental mammals, which form a different group of mammals from either the marsupials (pouched mammals) or the monotremes (egg-laying mammals).
No, elephants are not arthropods. Elephants belong to the class Mammalia, which makes them mammals, while arthropods are a separate group that includes insects, arachnids, and crustaceans. Arthropods are characterized by their exoskeleton, segmented bodies, and jointed appendages, which are distinct from the features of elephants.
No, elephants are not marsupials. Elephants are considered placental mammals.
Elephants are mammals and are warm blooded.
No. No males of a species has babies. Elephants are mammals.
Yes