Mammals give milk to their young, have some type of hair sometime in their lives, breathe air, and do not have feathers or gills.
Since mammals give live nirth to their young, they will have a womb (uterus) where the baby animal grows until time to be born- and mammary glands (breasts) since mammals nurse their babies.
Two special groups of Australian mammals are the monotremes (egg-laying mammals - platypus and echidna) and marsupials (pouched mammals like the kangaroo and wombat).
The platypus and the Echidna. They are special because they are the only mammals that lay eggs but suckle their young with mother's milk.
Their lungs are the breathing parts.
Mammals all have mammary glands- breasts- that produce milk for their babies. All mammals nurse their babies. Other animals do not.
Legs you idiot
You can't. Only female mammals - and cats are mammals - have the required body parts to get pregnant.
Koalas and Kangaroos belong to the group of animals known as Marsupials. These mammals are characterized by having special pouches in which they keep their young.
yes they do! they have legs a special scent and other body parts
They are a blue gray. They live a in the water and they are mammals!
Only mammals can produce milk, which newborn baby mammals drink in order to grow. Milk contains fat, vitamins, calcium, and protein.
There are many special body parts in hawks. The beaks and wings of a hawk are considered special body parts.