Sloths raise their young by carrying them on their bodies for the first few months of their life, until they become more independent. They teach their young how to find food and navigate their environment. Sloth mothers are very protective and provide guidance and care to their offspring until they can fend for themselves.
Sloths are herbivores because they eat fruit , leaves, buds, and young twigs.
Marsupial has to do with how the young are born and cared for. Carnivore is about what they eat. There are carnivore marsupials - like the Tasmanian Devil. Sloths are mammals, NOT marsupials, and NOT carnivores.
A Manta Ray keeps its young underneath them at a times
Sloths belong to the phylum Chordata and the class Mammalia.
Yes
Young 3-toed sloths are referred to as baby sloths or sloth babies.
Sloths are mainly herbivores that do not normally eat their young.
Young sloths stay with their mothers until they are old enough, and have learned enough, to look after themselves. On average, about a year.
Generally, about a year.
Sloths are herbivores because they eat fruit , leaves, buds, and young twigs.
Sloths feed their young by nursing them with milk produced by the mother. The young sloth will cling to the mother's belly or back while nursing. Sloths are known to have a slow metabolism, so the milk provides vital nutrients for the growing offspring.
Well doyee! They are mammels. Mammels have live young.
gorillas do raise their young
Generally a year.
Sloths protect their young by carrying them on their stomach or back, providing warmth, security, and camouflage. They also teach their young how to find food and navigate their environment. Sloths are devoted parents and will defend their young from predators when necessary.
No, sloths do not have pouches like some other marsupials such as kangaroos. Sloths carry their young by holding them close to their bodies or clinging to them while moving through the trees.
yesYes. A sloth is a mammal. It has fur and it feeds its young on mothers' milk.