Classification of Mammals under 9 main categories: 1.Egg laying mammals(eg.Duck-billed Platypus,Australian Spiny Ant-Eater) 2.Marsupials(eg.wallaby,kangaroo etc.) 3.Insect-eating mammals(Insectivora) eg.Rats 4.Chiropetra(eg. bats) 5.Hooved Animals(eg.cow,zebra(2 hooves); rhinos(3 hooves)) 6.Aquatic Mammals(eg. whales,dolphins an porpoises) 7.Carnivora(eg.Tigers,Lions,Wolves etc) 8.Proboscidea(eg.Indian or African elephant & extinct mammoths/mastodons) 9.Primates(eg. Homo Sapiens)
Yes, mammals have different skin types. To cite one example, whales, which are mammals, live their entire lives in salt water. What happens to your hands after you've been in the water for a few hours? Whales don't have this problem because their skin is different than ours. The number of different skin types in mammals would depend on how you chose to classify skin types, and there are different ways of classifying skin. yes
There are many different kinds of mammals on earth. You may find different types of mammals in the dictionary.Examples of mammals are humans, cheetahs, Wolves, rhinoceros, Lar Gibbon, sunda fliying lemut and Asian elephant.
lizards and all different types of mammals
No. They are completely different types of mammals. Honey badges are placental mammals, while Tasmanian devils are marsupials.
The mamals fur, armor and, skill
There are four kinds of Manatee, Dugong and Sea-cow in the sirenia group.
Different types of animals that live in a can include mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and insects. Each of these animals plays a unique role in the ecosystem of the .
The three types of mammals are:Placental mammals, or Eutherians. This is the largest group of mammals.Marsupials (often referred to as the "pouched mammals")Monotremes, or egg-laying mammals
It is unknown because there are different types of animals that we can discover. There can be different reptiles, insects, birds and mammals.
NO! They're mammals.
there are 5000 mammals in existence.
Monotremes and marsupials are both types of mammals along with placental mammals