answersLogoWhite

0

All mammals including the sub groups marsupials and monotremes.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is a group of warm-blooded animals with hair or fur called?

There are few different types of groups of animals that are warm blooded and have hair or fur. The largest group of warm blooded animals are tigers and coyotes.


What group of animals is warm-blooded and has fur or hair with 6 letters?

There are few different types of groups of animals that are warm blooded and have hair or fur. The largest group of warm blooded animals are tigers and coyotes.


What is a group of warm blooded animals with hair or fur?

The group of animals with fur or hair is the mammals.


Which group of animals has hair or fur on their bodies?

the mammals are a group of animals that give live birth, feed their young with milk, are warm-blooded, and have hair or fur


What are animal of warm blooded animals with hair of fur called?

the last shou;ld be a


What are the names of animals that are warm-blooded?

anything with fur, hair, or feathers


What animals are warm blooded but have no hair?

Yeah, because that's how they keep warm. Like take an dog for an instance, dogs are warm blooded animals, and they have fur.


What are animal called that are warm blooded with hair?

Mammals


Is a mammal an organism?

yes they are warm blooded animals.


Is it true that only birds and mammals are warm blooded animals?

Yes. Only birds and mammals are warm-blooded.


Is an giant desert centipede a mammal?

No, a giant desert centipede is not a mammal. It belongs to the class of invertebrates known as arthropods, specifically in the group called myriapods. Mammals are a completely different class of animals that have hair, produce milk for their young, and are warm-blooded.


Differences between mammals and other animals?

Mammals: Are Warm-blooded (i.e. with an internal heat source and regulation), Are Viviparous - the Duck-billed Platypus and one or two other animals are warm-blooded but lay eggs, and strictly speaking belong to their own group, the monotremes, not mammals. Lactate - to feed their own young directly. Have hair, to greater or lesser extent depending on species and (in our species at least) sex. The birds are warm-blooded but are all oviparous, do not lactate and have feathers not hair - and are closer to reptiles than to mammals.