mammary gland
A dog is a mammal. It is a vertebrate (has backbone), has hair, gives birth to live young, and nourishes offspring with milk from the mammary glands.
The mammal that nourishes its unborn offspring through a placenta inside its uterus is called a placental mammal. This group includes most mammals, such as humans, elephants, and whales. The placenta facilitates the transfer of nutrients and oxygen from the mother to the developing fetus while also removing waste products. This reproductive strategy allows for longer gestation periods and more developed young at birth.
Yes, a yak has a backbone. As a mammal, it is part of the vertebrate group, which means it possesses a spine made up of vertebrae. This backbone supports the animal's body structure and protects its spinal cord.
Being a mammal, a female whale is a "cow".
No to be a mammal you have to give live birth. If they live birth they have to give milk.
A bison is a mammal because the female (cow) gives live-birth and suckles the young.
The fact that it is warm blooded, and the ability of female Zebras to nurse their offspring, makes it a mammal.
It is a mammal and the female gives birth.
No. Only a male can impregnate a female. No female mammal of any species can get another female pregnant. For mammals that have a "heat" cycle, being in "heat" is required for pregnancy by a male. If such a mammal (a dog for instance) is not in heat or doesn't have a male partner, pregnancy is not possible.
A female grizzly bear with youngsters
a ram is a male sheep (a female is an ewe), it is a mammal a side note: all marsupials are mammals
The diaphragm