All mammals are cared for by at least one parent after birth.
cheese and mitocondria
two. like all mammals :)
Raccoons are mammals so they are born alive
All mammals are born by the mother giving live birth to them. However there are two exceptions to this rule. Platypus and Echidnas are mammals but they lay eggs. Which is extremely unusual for a mammal.
Birds are not mammals. They are in their own category, which is "Birds". The only two egg-laying mammals are the platypus and the echidna, which are classified as monotremes.
Born animals are mammals and eggs can be from birds, reptiles, amphibians and two types of mammals, the platypus and the echidna.
Theyre 3d
Hippos are born alive, like nearly all mammals. There are only two mammals on Earth that lay eggs. They are the platypus and spiny anteaters.
Birds and mammals are mutually exclusive categories of animal. Monotremes (duckbilled platypus and echidna) are sometimes incorrectly said to be "half-bird" because they lay eggs instead of giving live birth, but they share more characteristics with mammals and are classified as such.
Alive**********************Most mammals are born fully formed [infant version of the adults] and do not hatch from eggs.Most mammals are born alive.There are two egg-laying mammals. The platypus and the echidna are both egg-laying mammals, or monotremes.They are still classified as mammals because they feed their young on mothers' milk - a characteristic unique to mammals alone.There are just three known species of egg-laying mammals, or monotremes. They are the platypus and short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) of Australia, and the long-beaked echidna (Zaglosssus bruijni) of Papua New Guinea. The echidna is sometimes called the spiny anteater, and there are several sub-species of the long-beaked echidna: the Western long-beaked echidna, Sir David's long-beaked echidna and the Eastern long-beaked echidna.
Two special groups of Australian mammals are the monotremes (egg-laying mammals - platypus and echidna) and marsupials (pouched mammals like the kangaroo and wombat).
A conversation between two flying mammals is a bat chat.