Can you please rephrase your question and ask again if you want to get a correct answer.
because they come after the birth
Yes, all baby gorillas do have an umbilical cord at birth. And that includes all mammals.
Monkeys typically chew or tear their umbilical cords after giving birth. This behavior is instinctual and helps the mother monkey detach the newborn safely from the placenta.
Not only humans have umbilical cord, all the mammals of the Eutheria infraclass have it, this are the placental mammals and are all the animals that give birth to a live animal but not including the marsupials such as the kangaroo, for example the human, the dog, the cow all have umbilical cord
Yes, many baby animals are connected to their mother via an umbilical cord when they are born. The cord is typically chewed or broken by the mother after birth to separate the baby from the placenta. This allows the baby to start breathing on its own and begin its independent life.
because they come after the birth
The small scar where the umbilical cord was attached is called the umbilicus or belly button. It is formed when the umbilical cord is cut after birth and eventually dries up and falls off, leaving a small scar.
In placental mammals, the umbilical cord (also called the birth cord or funiculus umbilicalis) is a conduit between the developing embryo orfetus and the placenta.
Yes, all baby gorillas do have an umbilical cord at birth. And that includes all mammals.
The umbilical cord typically takes about 1 to 2 weeks to heal after birth.
It is called as umbilical cord. Baby get it's blood supply via this cord in the womb of the mother. This umbilical cord has to to be cut and tied after the birth of the bay. The stump falls off after few days after the birth of the baby
With mammals, the fetus has a connection by its umbilical cord to an organ of the mother, called the placenta. Blood passes through the umbilical cord to the fetus, carrying food and oxygen. The umbilical cord is attached to the fetus at a point you will later call your navel or belly button.
The umbilical vein is found in fetuses and newborn infants. Within a week after birth, the umbilical vein is destroyed and replaced by the round ligament of the liver.
The two structures that are connected by the umbilical cord are the embryo and the placenta. The umbilical cord is also known as the navel string or birth cord.
It is a scar from the umbilical cord that is removed at birth.
During prenatal development in mammals, the umbilical cord connects the fetus to the placenta. In humans, the umbilical cord, or birth cord, is about 20 inches long, and is generally clamped and cut at the newborn infant's navel between 1 and 5 minutes after birth.
the practice of preserving for future use fetal blood that remains in the umbilical cord at the time of birth.