Yes, beavers are mammals.
Beavers are mammals.
Cattails are eaten by various insects, birds, and mammals. Some common consumers include birds like red-winged blackbirds and rails, muskrats, beavers, and insects like the cattail caterpillar.
The five dominant animals in freshwater biomes are fish, amphibians (such as frogs and salamanders), insects (such as dragonflies and mosquitoes), birds (such as ducks and herons), and mammals (such as beavers and otters).
Beavers without tails adapt by using their hind legs for balance, swimming with more effort, and relying on their teeth and body shape for survival.
Turtles are reptiles, not mammals.
Beavers are mammals.
push it out Pepsi_dog: beavers are mammals, therefore as all mammals give birth.
The beaver is a rodent. Rodents are placental mammals, and beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials, which are pouched mammals. Beavers are also not monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. The only monotremes are latches and echidnas.
beavers are mammals
beavers are mammals
No. Beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals.
No, a beaver isn't related to a platypus. Even though they're both mammals, a beaver gives birth to live young while a platypus lays eggs.
Yes. If it's warm-blooded and has live babies (exceptions are the platypus and echidna), and nurses its young, it's a mammal.
They have two legs plus two. Beavers are four-legged mammals.
Rodents are gnawing mammals.
== Beavers live in water; they are considered aquatic mammals. These rodents cannot survive without it.
Whales, seals, otters, beavers...