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Mammals 330-
most mammals, including
monkeys, cats, and dogs,
are called placental
mammals because the
young develop inside the
mother’s womb, or uterus,
and are fed by means of the
placenta. the placenta is a
specialized organ embedded in
the wall of the womb. It carries
nutrients and other essential
materials from the mother’s
blood to the baby’s blood. these
nutrients help the young grow
and develop. after the young are
born, the placenta comes out of
the uterus as afterbirth.
monotreme mammals
Five kinds of mammals lay eggs. they are called
monotreme mammals, and include the platypus
and the four types of echidna (spiny ant-eater).
all are found in australasia. after about 10 days,
the young hatch out of the eggs, and then feed
on their mother’s milk.
short beaked anteater
the short-beaked echidna, lays a
single egg in a temporary pouch
on its abdomen. after the young
echidna hatches, it stays in the
pouch for 6 to 8 weeks. once
its spines start developing, it
is kept in a burrow.
PrImates
monkeys, apes, and humans belong to a
group called primates. Primates are able
to grasp with their hands. most primates
have thumbs and big toes, with flat fingernails
rather than claws. members of the primate
group range in size from the mouse lemur,
which weighs only 2 oz (60 g), to the
gorilla, which weighs up to 610 lb (275 kg).
Pouched mammals
kangaroos, opossums,
wallabies, koalas, wombats,
and bandicoots are all known
as pouched mammals or
marsupials. these animals
carry their young in their
pouches until the young are
developed and strong enough to
leave. once it has left the pouch, the
joey (young wallaby) returns to the pouch if it
needs to suckle or if it is tired or threatened. marsupials
are found in australia and new Guinea, south america,
and north america. a few marsupials, such as the shrew
opossum of south america, do not have pouches.
the anImal GrouP called mammals includes the
heaviest, tallest, and fastest animals on land—the elephant,
the giraffe, and the cheetah. mice, whales, rhinoceroses,
bats, and humans are also mammals. like birds,
mammals are warm-blooded (endothermic), but three
features set them apart from all other creatures.
all mammals are covered in fur or hair, all feed
their young on milk, and all have a unique type of
jaw. the jawbone helps us to identify the fossilized
bones of prehistoric mammals that lived on earth
millions of years ago. mammals are also members of the
group known as vertebrates because they all have
vertebrae (backbones). today, there are more than
5,000 kinds of mammals, including carnivores (meat
eaters) such as tigers; herbivores (plant eaters)
such as rabbits; and omnivores (meat and plant
eaters) such as bears. cattle, sheep, goats, and
most other farm animals are mammals, and
many pets are mammals, too, including cats,
dogs, and guinea pigs. mammals live nearly everywhere. they are
found on land, in the sea, and in the sky, from the coldest arctic
to the most searing heat of the desert.
MAMMALS
A wallaby’s large tail is so strong that it
can act as a prop for the wallaby
to lean on.
Young male
joey
A mammal’s
body is
covered in fur.
marsuPIal younG
marsupials are not completely
developed when they are born.
after birth, the baby crawls
through its mother’s fur into
a pocketlike pouch on the
abdomen, where it attaches
itself to her teat, and stays
there until it is fully developed.
US_330_Mammals_1.indd 330 09/02/16 3:57 pm