Mammals have hair, are warm-blooded, and feed their young with milk.
They also give live birth, except for the echidna and the platypus.
One distinguishing fact about mammals is that they possess mammary glands, which produce milk to nourish their young. Additionally, mammals are characterized by having fur or hair on their bodies at some stage of development. These features set mammals apart from other animal groups, such as reptiles, amphibians, and fish.
no
Whales are mammals. All mammals are warm blooded. The answer is therefore false.
Humans are in fact animals, as opposed to plants or bacteria and the like. It is true that God or evolution or whatever you believe in gave humans extra skills that we all can list with no problem, yet we are still considered animals, mammals more specifically.
Yes. Only birds and mammals are warm-blooded.
What's true is that no animals live on the Antarctica, but that a few sea birds and aquatic mammals use the beaches in Antarctica for breeding.
Platypuses and echidnas are different from other mammals because they are monotremes, i.e. mammals which lay eggs.
yes, not all animals are mammals though. There are reptiles, fish, and insects. There are also amphibians, arachnids, and crustaceans.Hope that answers your question :)!
There is one group of mammals that fly. They are called bats. A number of other mammals can glide, but this is not true flight. Many insects, which are not related to mammals or birds, can also fly.
Mammals are the only animals that have true hair. This feature is what sets them apart from other animals.
Mammals have three special characteristics that separate them from other groups of animals. The females produce milk by mammary glands, they have hair, and they have 3 specific middle ear bones. All of these characteristics are true of elephants, thus they are mammals (in the Order Proboscidea).
bats are capable of true flight.humans are capable of true fight (and many other mammals)