Primates, canines, and felines, just to name a few.
The artiodactyls are ungulate mammals with an even number of toes. This includes a wide array of familiar animals including pigs, cows, sheep, goats, hippos, camels, deer, giraffes, and antelopes. The contrasting group, perissodactyls, are animals with an odd number of toes (and one middle toe bearing the weight), which includes horses, zebras, rhinoceroses, and tapirs.
This group of ungulates includes horses, tapirs, and rhinos. They do not have even number of toes and are herbivores. They usually have one or three toes.
Even, they have four toes on each hoof.
Even. They have two hoofs on each foot known as cloven hooves. Thus, on the whole they have 2x4= 8 "toes".
The perissodactyls are what is otherwise called the "Odd-toed ungulates"; the principle example is the horse, which now walks on just a single toe, but whose ancestors walked on three or five. The other group is the artiodactyls, or "Even-toed ungulates" like cattle, deer, and swine.
No they are artiodactyla they have an even number of toes
An artiodactyle is a member of the Artiodactyla, a group of ungulates.
A hoofed animal is called ungulate .Ungulates include horse, zebra, donkey, hippo, goat, moose, antelope and gazelles , deer etc . There are two orders of Ungulates, those having an even number of toes as deer and goat and and those having an odd number of toes as horse .
No. Some hoofs have an even number of toes, while others have an odd number of toes. It sounds stupid, but it's very important in taxonomy.
no cows and others are hoved and they have two toes no cows and others are hoved and they have two toes No cows are hoofed and they are two toed Various hoofed mammals (Artiodactyla), including cattle, sheep, goats, deer, camels, and hippopotamus have an even number of toes, two or four, on each foot.
Sloths are NOT monkeys, these lazy boy loungers are Mammals but not in the primate group but are more primitive, some have three or two toes.
I have never heard of anyone having more than six toes per foot (or 12 toes in total). In theory, there could be a mutation which produces an even larger number of toes, but it would be very unlikely.