Well...humans sweat all over our skin. We respire sweat from our pores. Sweat from our armpits smell because of the bacteria wastes.
Primates (animals in the monkey and ape family) and horses
No, bugs do not sweat. Insects do not have sweat glands like humans do. Instead, they regulate their body temperature through behaviors such as moving to cooler areas, flying, or burrowing in the ground.
Becaue your muscles, like a car engine, becomes warm when they're expending power. Cars have radiators, humans have sweat. As the sweat evaporates, you cool down.
No, snakes do not sweat. They do not have sweat glands like humans and some other mammals. Instead, they rely on other methods such as seeking shade or water to regulate their body temperature.
Girrafe zebra
Dogs do have sweat glands that are called apocrine glands. Dogs only produce sweat on areas not covered with fur, such as the nose and paw pads. Dogs also have sweat glands on their noses. Dogs don't sweat everywhere like us humans, but they do have sweat glands and they do sweat ! I hope this helps.
Birds and dogs don't perspire or sweat like humans. They pant.
No Humans Don't sweat rat poison where on earth did you get that idea? From Mars? OK on to scientific stuff humans sweat contains oil and water and you sweat to cool your body down when its hot! that's the real answer!!
Humans! But cats will "sweat" on the pads of their paws. got to go
Pigs sweat but not the way humans do. Pigs do not have eccrine sweat glands which are used for temperature regulation in humans through watery evaporative coolness. Pigs have apocrine glands which excrete protein, ammonia, lipids, and chromogranins and the bacterial decomposition of these leads to odor so perhaps that's where the origin of the idiom lies since it a generally accepted concept that sweating leads to odor.
Yes, they do. They may not sweat and such as humans do, but they can get dirty just like everyone/everything else in this world.