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a mammal is an animal, but mammals live on land, cannot fly, and other special characteristics like that The above isn't quite correct. As stated in the first answer, mammals are animals -- of the taxonomic Class mammalia -- however the two big factors that separate them from other classes are that they bear live young and suckle those young, and that they are "warm-blooded". There are mammals that live in the water (whales, dolphins, seals, sea lions, walruses, manatees, sea otters...I'm sure there are more), as well as many that live on land. Bats are mammals that can fly, as are "fllying" squirrels. Answer:All mammals are animals are animals, not all animals are mammals. Mammals (including monotremes and marsupials) have hair, are "warm blooded", suckle their young. Mammals generally bear living young but the monotremes (like the platypus) lay eggs and the marsupials (like opossums) bear their young at a very low stage of development and have to carry them in a body pouch until they mature. Mammals occupy a wide range of ecosystems (deserts, mountains, rainforests, grasslands, swamps, oceans, llakes, etc.) and environments and can swim (whales), fly (bats), burrow (moles), climb, walk on the land. They share all of these ecosytems and environments with other animals

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14y ago

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