There are two potential answers to this, depending upon what you want to call "having a navicular bone".
The navicular bone is the third phalanx of the third digit in the horse.
As the horse is the only species that calls the third phalanx of the third digit the navicular bone, one potential answer is "the horse".
However, there are many species that have the third phalanx of the third digit, although it generally isn't given a special name. Based on this, the other possible answer is "most mammals".
A horse has 4 navicular bones and they are located in the hoof
In the foot
The Zebra
Navicular bone is situated on the medial side of foot. The function of the navicular bone is to distribute the weight of the body evenly through the bones in the foot. Arteries running through the foot are also held together by these bones.
There are seven tarsal bones: three cuneiform bones, the cuboid, navicular, talus, and calcaneus.
Yes, mammals have bones.
Sloths are mammals and all mammals have bones.
The navicular bone is sometimes referred to scaphoid bone, which is one of the carpal bones in the wrist. It is also called the radiocarpal joint when it is associated with th radius and the lunate, another carpal bone. The three bones the form an ellipsoidal joint.
Tarsal bones. Individually they are the Talus, Calcaneus, Navicular, Cudboid and the Cuneforms 1-3.
The Tarsus consists of 7 bones in the foot: talus, calcaneus, navicular, cuboid, medial cuneiform, intermediate cuneiform, lateral cuneiform.
the tarsus (or tarsal region) is the ankle. The bones are: calcaneus, talus, navicular, cuboid, and the medial, intermediate and lateral cuniform bones.
There are NO mammals that do not have backbones.