Depends on the species.
ANS2:
A young stays with parent for protection until it is ready to be independent.
The length of time parent birds care for their young varies depending on the species. Generally, parent birds will care for their young until they are able to fend for themselves and become independent. This can range from a few weeks to several months.
It is different depending on the type of mammal We are mammals, and we usually care for our young until we die. Cows care for their young for at least two years, but young are slaughtered at two weeks old.
As long as they possibly can. They will fight and feed their young until you take them away from them.
No, ferrets are not marsupials. Ferrets are related to weasels in the family Mustelidae of the order Carnivora. The weasel family includes - Ferret, stoat, polecat, mink, ermine, black-footed ferret, long tailed weasel, least weasel.
At least 5 years. I think?
An Aardvark is a long nosed mammal.
no it is not as long as you have a parent and by that time you are also maturie enough
It varies hugely from a week or two for mice and shrews up to a year for many large mammals.
Yes. As with all bats, they are warm-blooded air-breathng vertebrates with fur that feed their young milk.
For at least one year
Do you perhaps mean Coyote? It's a mammal and it has a long snout. I don't think there is a mammal beginning 'coa'.
Only the mother is involved in caring for the young. The male is only around long enough to mate with the female.