All mammals are warm blooded, incl mole rats.
No, they are known as the only discovered cold-blooded mammal.
Warm-blooded. I'm a mammal(mah-mole).mammal - a warmblooded animal. Small meat-eaters like Troodon (troad-ohn) are mammals, but they lay eggs.
Warm-blooded. I'm a mammal(mah-mole).mammal - a warmblooded animal. Small meat-eaters like Troodon (troad-ohn) are mammals, but they lay eggs.
mammal
yes they are
YesAs it is a warm blooded vertebrate with hair or fur and female moles produce milk to feed their young then I would say a mole is a mammal.
The naked mole rat has almost no hair at all.
No. Mammals are defined as being warm blooded. However, some mammals (such as the vampire bat or the naked mole rat) have inefficient body temperature control, meaning that their body temperature is prone to dropping below optimum temperature.
Being warm blooded is one of the major defining factors of being classified as a mammal. Some mammals do not maintain their internal temperature as well as others. The Naked Mole rat, for example, is sometimes cited as an example of a cold-blooded mammal, but this is misleading, as it still regulates its temperature - just not by metabolic means, as other mammals do, but more by behavioural means. They can allow their body temperature to fluctuate more than that of other mammals. It could best be described as a warm-blooded homeothermic ectotherm. Similarly, bats cannot maintain their internal temperature via metabolic means either, but rely on their behavioural adaptations and their environment. The problem is with the use of the terms "warm blooded" and "cold blooded", as they are not really accurate.Yes all mammals are warm blooded.
No. Mammals are defined as being warm blooded. However, some mammals (such as the vampire bat or the naked mole rat) have inefficient body temperature control, meaning that their body temperature is prone to dropping below optimum temperature.
There are no mammals with feathers, and mammals do not produce crop milk, but mammary milk instead. Egg-laying and cold-bloodedness are generally not seen in mammals, but there are exceptions. Platypodes lay eggs, and naked mole rates are cold-blooded.
The head of a colony of naked mole rats is a queen naked mole rat.