Platypuses are not born; they are hatched, as the platypus is one of just two types of egg-laying mammals. The female platypus takes very good care of its young for several months until they are weaned. The young sometimes stay with the mother as a family group until the next breeding season.
A young mole is called a "pup". Mole pups are born hairless and blind, and they depend on their mother for care and protection until they are old enough to fend for themselves.
Kangaroos are marsupials while cows, elephants and lions are placental mammals. What this means is that kangaroo joeys, like other marsupial young, are born very undeveloped, after a short gestation period. Moving purely by instinct, the baby joey (the term for all marsupial young) makes its way to the mother's pouch, where the young joey latches onto a teat, remaining there to continue its growth and development. The young of placental mammals are well developed when born, and are able to survive independently of the mother, given the right care. Marsupial joeys cannot. Regarding monotremes, they are completely different mammals again, not bearing live young like marsupials and placental mammals, but laying eggs for reproduction.Many marsupials have the mammary glands enclosed within a protective pouch. This is where the young feed on the mother's milk. The teat swells in the joey's mouth, which secures it in place, whereas with placental mammal young, they feed as they need to. They are capable of surviving without the mother, as long as they receive their nutrients from another suitable source. No joey can survive without its mother for several weeks, at least.
A young Gopher is called a pup. Pups are born hairless and blind, and rely on their parents for care and protection until they are old enough to venture out on their own.
Human babies are typically considered the most helpless compared to the young of other animals. They are born in a relatively undeveloped state and require constant care and support for an extended period of time.
they don't
It doesn't.
Jellyfish do not care for their young.Jellyfish don't feed their young, they fend for themselves.
No. I do not believe that jellies do, but sometimes polypes work together.
Aparently no, the lionesses do most of the work. Male lions kill their cubs.
They don't. Like most invertebrates young jellyfish fend for themselves. This is true of most animals that are not mammals or birds.
No. Lions are placental mammals and give birth to live young. The only mammals which lay eggs are monotremes, and include just three species: platypuses, short-beaked echidnas and long-beaked echidnas.
Mating a similar way to how lions and tigers do.
Because, lions lick them-self clean like cats. Also lions take care of their young like cats do too. That is why lions are in the cats species.
In nature, most animal mothers take care of their young. Jellyfish are not those type of mothers. When baby jellyfish hatch, they float out and live on their own.
Lions live in groups, which are called prides, because as a group they can better defend themselves, care for their young, as well as hunt more successfully.
It takes care of its yonug by nursing it, caring for it, and fights its battles... the parents care for it intill its 13 or 25 years old