Depending on what animal because animals are very different from one another, but that would mean you are considering humans not animals.
Related species have similar embryos.
It is either homologous structures or homozygous structures. Embryological structures are when different species of animals look similar in the earliest stage of development and Analogous structures are when animals look different but their function is basically the same. So just look up homologous structures and homozygous structures in your Bio book!!
Most living things look similar to their parents due to genetic inheritance. Offspring inherit genetic material from their parents, which determines their physical characteristics and traits. This inheritance ensures that traits are passed down from one generation to the next, resulting in a resemblance between parents and offspring.
Identical twins.
When a single embryo in a mother's womb splits into two separate embryos early on in embryonic development, identical twins are created. Because the two twin embryos originate from the same single embryo, they will have extremely similar, if not identical, physical appearances and emotional actions when they are born. Identical twins are "identical' because they are created from the same original embryo during development inside the womb, not due to who their parents are.
yes
I am currently in a biology class and we have been discussing this. Do not be fooled by your biology textbook, because it most likely has the wrong information in it. You will probably see a picture of a human embryo compared to embryos of several other animals, and they will all look extremely similar. Your textbook answer to this question should be that they are very similar in the earliest stages and then diversify as they develop (this shows evidence for common ancestry). However, this has been proven false. (I happened upon your question while searching for information to support that this has been proven.) I would provide links to evidence and such if I had found them, but my search has literally just started. Embryos are extremely different in the earliest stages. It is not until a later stage that they become similar. Therefore, this cannot provide evidence for common descent. So human embryos compared to other animal embryos goes like this: Very very different then Similar then Growing differences
Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny, or the development of the individual summarizes the evolution of the species. For example, human embryos go through a stage in which they develop gills as did their aquatic forerunners.
All vertebrate embryos look roughly the same, showing that they come from a common ancestor.
Animals that look odd and different from other animals.
To a trained eye they look different.
similar to look the same but have a different size or measurement.
Related species have similar embryos.
No, embryos do not look for their own food outside the egg. They rely on nutrients stored in the egg or provided by the parent until they hatch.
ways to look at similar outlook information in different formats and arrangements are called what?
The term for words from different languages that look similar and mean the same thing is "cognates."
Some animals that are considered axolotl look-alikes include mudpuppies, newts, and salamanders. These amphibians share similar physical characteristics such as external gills and a similar body shape.