No. Reptiles are a single class. There are four orders of reptiles, one of which is not well-known. The well-known orders are Testudines (turtles and tortoises), Crocodilia (crocodiles, alligators, and gharials), and Squamata (lizards and snakes). The fourth order is Rhynchocephalia, which consists of only two species native to New Zealand known collectively as the tuatara.
mammals, reptiles, fish ,ambhibians, and birds
reptiles amphibians and fish
Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
amphibians,mammals, reptiles, birds and fish
Scientists group animals into classes for the sake of study. The most commonly known classes of animals are birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. Other common classes are insects and arachnids.
Six primary classes, three intermediate classes (Junior High) Three Senior classes.
fishes amphibians reptiles birds mammals
All tetrapodes , mammals , birds , reptiles and amphibians .
The best fossil evidence supporting the division between reptiles and birds would be transitional fossils showing a clear evolutionary pathway between the two groups. Fossils with features characteristic of both reptiles and birds, such as Archaeopteryx, provide strong support for the evolutionary link between these classes.
One of the three native reptiles that live in Florida is the gecko. The other two native reptiles that live in Florida are the alligator and crocodile.
No they are not mammals. Amphibians and Reptiles are other classes of animals at the same level as the mammals. Mammals have hair, are warm blooded and give birth to live young. Amphibians and reptiles reproduce using eggs.
masupial