No, there are more bird species than mammal species in the world. As of recent estimates, there are approximately 10,000 recognized bird species compared to around 6,400 mammal species. However, in terms of individual numbers, there may be more mammals overall due to the large populations of certain species, like rodents.
No. Birds and mammals have radically different lung designs. Birds have a far more complex, but more efficient design than mammals do.
well birds get eating more than mammals so they help care more.
Mammals are distantly related to birds. Oddly, if you look at an evolutionary tree, birds are actually more closely related to reptiles than they are to mammals.
No. Dinosaurs were not mammals. They were more closely related to birds and modern reptiles than they were to mammals.
birds are different than mammals
There are many mammals and birds that can survive after a storm. However there are fewer mammals and birds that can survive after a storm than what can.
True
Dinosaurs are more closely related to mammals. Both mammals and dinosaurs share a reptilian ancestor that they don't share with amphibians.
No. Hawks are birds, not mammals. Although birds are warm-blooded, they do not nurse their young, and most have lighter bone structures than mammals.
No. Mammals evolved from synapsid reptiles, a group not closely related to dinosaurs. Dinosaurs are more closely related to modern reptiles and birds than they are to mammals.
fly to and from the island while mammals need would need a land route or be taken by boat.
Bats are in their own family of mammals. As mammals they are more closely related to cats and dogs than they are to birds.