there are no cold blooded mammals no there are no cold blooded mammals
Dolphins are animals. Mammals, to be more precise.
Yes, carnivores are mammals. Mammals are animals that have hair or fur, produce milk for their young, and typically give birth to live young. Carnivores are a group of mammals that primarily eat meat as their main food source.
Eutherians are a group of mammals consisting of placental mammals plus all extinct mammals that are more closely related to living placentals (such as humans) than to livingmarsupials (such as kangaroos).
Simply put because mammalian cells require more sustained energy.
For learning purposes. Rats are mammals and their organs and biological composition share many similarities with other mammals. It will provide a deeper understanding of the inner workings of more developed animals.
no they are greatly outnumbered by warm and many are harmless or even beneficial eating other insects like frogs
If you are warmblooded wherever you go your body temperature always constant and if you are coldblooded your body temperature will change to whatever the outside temperature is.
(1) Only mammals nurse their babies on the mother's milk. (2) Only mammals have hair. (3) Mammals are warm-blooded. Birds are warm-blooded, too, but nearly all other animals are coldblooded. (4) Mammals have a larger, more well-developed brain than other animals. (5) Most mammals give their young offspring more protection and training than other animals.
Warm blooded animals are able to produce body heat, and can be active even in extreme cold. Mammals are warm blooded. Cold blooded animals become torpid and may even hibernate during cold weather. For example: a snake (reptile) is cold blooded and needs to bask in the morning sun to warm up before becoming more active. Frogs and toads will bury themselves in the mud of a pond to escape being frozen during winter.
Because - Mammals are warmblooded and more active - they turn much of the food they eat into heat for their muscles, so they are able to move quickly. Reptiles and amphibians are cold-blooded, and are relatively inactive - they get what little heat they need from their surroundings.
First of all, a mammal is a warmblooded vertebrate animal. So a small mammal could include rodents, birds, rabbits, raccoons and otters, just to name a few. You can search up "small mammals" for more information.
They are warmblooded animals. Both are vertebrates and so the bone structures are broadly similar. Birds are more closely related to Reptiles than to mammals.
Any warmblooded vertebrate having the skin more or less covered with hair. Hope this helps!
They eat small mammals more coz i dont think they can eat and find massive or big mammals.
Rabbits are mammals, which makes them warm blooded. If you want to be more specific, they are endothermic homeotherms, which means they maintain a constant internal temperature. Also, not all creatures born live are warmblooded, like a previous answer suggested. There are some snakes that give live birth and they are still cold blooded. The two mammals that are not born live are the platypus and echidna. They hatch from eggs, but are still warm blooded.
Bats ARE mammals.
Dinosaurs are more closely related to mammals. Both mammals and dinosaurs share a reptilian ancestor that they don't share with amphibians.