No. Only mammals do.
Mother mammals make milk for their offspring.
They have fur and fee their young milk. Humans are mammals.
While birds are vertebrates, they are not mammals. Mammals have a series of general characteristics that include (with exceptions) birthing live young, having hair or fur as an outer covering, and producing milk to feed their young.
Humans are mammals, all mammals have hair and care for their young that includes breast feeding.
Numbats are insectivorous marsupials that feed on termites. The mother nurses her young inside her pouch until they are around 6 months old. As the babies grow, the mother starts taking them to termite mounds and teaches them to eat termites by licking and preying on them.
Amphibians do not feed their young milk. Only mammals do that.
No , they don't feed young .
No, they do not. Amphibians lay eggs in water. The eggs give the embryos all the nutrition they need until they hatch. After that, they're on their own and live on small insects. No. Only mammals feed their young milk.
They do not feed their young milk. That is what Mammals do and what makes a mammal a mammal.
No, only mammals (of whom have mammary glands) are able to produce milk.
No, because salamanders are amphibians. Only mammals produce milk and feed it to their young. Salamanders are carnivores.
They don't feed their young at all.
Birds do not feed their young on milk. The lyrebird is a bird, so it does not feed its young milk.
Parrots do not feed their young with milk.
They don't! Most amphibians are generally independent from the moment they are born. However some, such as the worm, feed their young their own flesh. Amphibians do not feed their young. They lay the eggs in water and leave them to fend for themselves. They are also quite likely to eat their own young. That is why they have so many eggs.
Yes, raccoons feed milk to their young.
Yes, they are mammals so they feed milk to their young.