they both lay eggs.
flying reptiles are in fact birds. as animals are now being classified into monophyletic groups, we must include birds as reptiles as well because they came from a common ancester
Around 3% of animals are vertebrates (animals that have a backbone). This includes approximately 64,000 species. Examples of animals that have a backbone are; sharks, reptiles, mammals and birds.
Amphibians , reptiles , mammals along with birds are included in Tetrapod Vertebrates .
The cloaca is part of the urogenital system. It is a common opening for the digestive, reproductive, and urinary systems in certain animals, such as birds, reptiles, and amphibians.
The animals that produce eggs are called oviparous, which means they lay eggs. Examples include birds, reptiles, amphibians, and various invertebrates like insects.
reptiles and amphibians have the most in common
Reptiles and birds share enough common characteristics to be classified in the same clade called Sauropsida, which includes all modern reptiles and birds.
They are all animals. That is about it.
Lay eggs
flying reptiles are in fact birds. as animals are now being classified into monophyletic groups, we must include birds as reptiles as well because they came from a common ancester
All of the described animals are vertebrates.
No. Birds and reptiles are separate from amphibians.
There are certain birds that eat reptiles.
They're egg-laying vertebrates with close common ancestors. In cladistic classification systems birds are actually considered a subset of reptiles, as this method of animal classification goes by closest common ancestor.
The most similar thing about birds and reptiles is that they both lay eggs. However, it is important to note that not all reptiles lay eggs. There are many species of snakes and lizards which do not lay eggs, but instead give birth to live young.
amphibians, reptiles, migratory birds, small mammals
Technically yes. Utahraptors are classified as dinosaurs and therefore reptiles. However they had more in common with birds than with modern reptiles.