Mice do not have sweat glands, so no they do not sweat. They cool off by dilating the blood vessels in their tail and ears and slow metabolism.
Cats have sweat glands located in their paw pads, but they are not used for cooling as much as they are for leaving scent markings. Cats primarily regulate their body temperature through panting and grooming.
Sheep sweat through sweat glands. The sheep produce moisture on their skin when they start to sweat on the mid side of their bodies.
Pigs have around 2,600 sweat glands distributed throughout their body. These sweat glands play a role in helping regulate the pig's body temperature.
sweat glands
Most cattle of European origin have their sweat glands in their noses. Brahman, Nelore, Guzerat, Afrikan and other long-eared loose-skinned breeds of the subspecies Bos taurus indicushave sweat glands in their skin and noses.
Cats do not have sweat glands unlike humans.
Some mammals have sweat glands, but not all. Most furbearing animals, like dogs and cats, have no sweat glands; the fur would keep the sweat from evaporating and defeat the purpose of having them. Animals with no sweat glands cool off by panting.
Cats have sweat glands located in their paw pads, but they are not used for cooling as much as they are for leaving scent markings. Cats primarily regulate their body temperature through panting and grooming.
No, they have sweat glands
Only mammals have sweat glands. Dinosaurs were reptiles, so they did not have sweat glands.
Sweat glands are found in the skin.
There are 250,000 sweat glands in a pair of feet.
In the sweat glands.
You mean sweat glands? If so then sudoriferous glands.
Sweat glands excrete sweat ( which is mostly salt and water).
The sudoriferous glands, the exact name is eccrine sweat glands.
Well sudoriferous glands are sweat glands. They include the Eccrine sweat glands also known as the merocrine sweat glands, Apocrine sweat glands, Ceruminous glands and mammary glands.