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Mammals and birds are the two classes of animals that are endothermic. The term 'endothermic' is the biological term for an animal that is warm-blooded.
Of those two options, I guess I'm going to have to go with "warm blooded". Good thing it happens to be correct.
No, reptiles are not warm blooded. Apart from one or two exceptions, all reptiles are cold blooded.
I'm pretty sure it's warm-blooded, because birds and mammals are the only two vertebrates that are warm-blooded.
Warm blooded and cold blooded
Yes and No. As of now, there are no living, warm blooded reptiles (except perhaps birds). But there were warm blooded Reptiles. The Dinosaurs were warm blooded, the reason why we know this is because of there natural size. Science dictates that to reach that sice they had to have two things, 1 extra oxygenated air and 2 a self sufficient internal heating source. edit: this is untrue. Leatherback turtles are warm blooded, strangly enough. So yes, there is one type of warm blooded reptile.
I think so! I have put warm and cold water in two separate gloves and poked holes in them, the cold blooded animal survived the longest.
Cold blooded (fish and reptiles) and warm-blooded (birds and mammals).
I guess these are two sub-division of an animal kingdom. Invertebrates. Vertebrates.
All sharks are cold blooded. However, two sharks have very high metabolic rates and typically have a higher body temperature than their surroundings. These are the mako and the great white, so they are sometimes referred to as "warm blooded", but they are still considered cold blooded.
No, they were not. There were many other warm blooded species before them. I'm not sure of specific names, but I know that birds were along much longer than the dinosaurs, and birds are warm blooded. Let me clarify from above. According to the currently accepted Evolution Theory, birds evolved from dinosaurs. Birds are warm blooded but dinosaurs, as far as the scientists can tell, were cold blooded.
Warm blooded, has live birth.