No. Ungulate are animals with hooves. Platypuses do not have hooves.
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A Large Ungulate Called The Bubal Hartebeest.
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Yes, a cow is an ungulate. Ungulates are mammals with hooves, and cows fall into this category because they have cloven hooves.
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No, an ungulate is an animal which has 'hooves' - like a cow. A Bush Baby is primate (it belongs to the same family as man) and therefore has hands and feet with fingers and toes like you or me - no hooves!.
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Yes, they can think, but are not all that intelligent, but average for an ungulate.
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The ungulate animal of the desert, usually with a hump, is a camel.
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A tapir is a large ungulate with a fleshy snout. They are found in Central and South America, as well as Southeast Asia. Tapirs are herbivores and have a distinctive elongated nose that they use for grasping vegetation.
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The tapir is a tropical ungulate found in Central and South America, as well as parts of Southeast Asia. They have a unique appearance resembling a mix between a pig and an elephant, and are excellent swimmers.
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Ungulate animals are mammals with hooves. They have a specialized digestive system for processing plant material, such as grasses and shrubs. Ungulates include animals like deer, cows, and horses.
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Hippo
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Perissodactyla. As all Equus, an odd toed Ungulate.
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They are close ungulate relatives of sheep.
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Yes and it is also a herbivore, a ruminant and an ungulate.
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That is the correct spelling of the ungulate mammal, "pig" (also swine).
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no. humans are mammals and do not have hooves.
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A camel is an ungulate within the genus Camelus,
Tribe: Camelini
Family: Camelidae
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulate)
Class: Mammalia (i.e. it's a mammal)
Clade: Synapsida
Phylum: Chordata (it's got a spine)
Kingdom:Animalia (it's an animal)
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Ungulates are hoofed mammals, such as cows, horses, hippos, elephants, llamas and aardvarks.
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Well there is no such thing as an ungulent, but there is an ungulate ... which is a hooved animal such as moose, deer, elk, etc.
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The horse (Equus ferus caballus) is a hooved (ungulate) mammal, a subspecies of the family Equidae.
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An ungulate is a hoofed mammal. They're divided into even-toed ungulates (pigs, camels, deer, cows, etc.) and odd toed ungulates (horses, rhinoes, etc) and a third group which includes elephants, hyraxes, and manatees. All of these are ungulates. The ungulate you are most likely to see on a daily basis is probably the cow. See related link.
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Horses have hooves, as do
Cows, Goats, deer, Cattle and Pigs - though they have a "Cloven Hoof" which is made of two hooves stuck together on each foot (these animals can also suffer from foot and mouth)
Cammels, Giraffes and Bison also have hooves
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Right between the hind legs, just like with any other female ungulate.
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Pigs are classified as ungulates because they have hooves on their feet. They are also classified as artiodactyls because they have an even number of toes on each foot, which is a characteristic of that order.
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Tapirs are large ungulate mammals, so their activities are confined to the forest floor.
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Tropical ungulates (hoofed, herbivorous animals) include giraffes, hippopotamuses, warthogs, rhinoceroses and zebras.
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An anoplotherium is a member of the extinct genus Anoplotherium, an ungulate known to have lived from the Late Eocene era to the Early Oligocene.
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Rory Putman has written:
'Ungulate management in Europe' -- subject(s): Wildlife management, Ecology, Ungulates
'Carrion and dung' -- subject(s): Animal carcasses, Biodegradation, Feces
'Competition and resource partitioning in temperate ungulate assemblies' -- subject(s): Behavior, Climatic factors, Competition (Biology), Ecology, Resource partitioning (Ecology), Ungulates
'Ungulate management in Europe' -- subject(s): Wildlife management, Ecology, Ungulates
'Principles of ecology' -- subject(s): Ecology
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Ungulate teeth are specialized for grinding and chewing tough plant material. They have high-crowned teeth with complex ridges that help in breaking down fibrous plants. These characteristics allow ungulates to efficiently process their food, aiding in their herbivorous feeding habits.
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That is the correct spelling of "giraffe" (a tall ungulate mammal).
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