Yes, there are seals in the Arctic. Such as Leopard seals, Harp seals, Arctic Ice seals, Earless seals etc.
No, silly!
A polar bear is a warm blooded, live birth-ing, mammal...
Plus the fur.
No, it's too cold and there is no food chain there for any animal.
Polar bears are mammals, not reptiles.
Yes! there's more venomous Amphibians than Reptiles.
The three Vertebrate groups that have the same temperature as their surroundings are Fish, Reptiles, and Amphibians. That means they are all cold blooded.
Mammals and birds both do well in the tundra. Fish, reptiles and amphibians--not so much. The best answer would probably be 'warm blooded'.
Amphibians do not have scales; reptiles do.
Reptiles have scales and Amphibians do not.
No. Birds and reptiles are separate from amphibians.
No. Reptiles and amphibians are two different orders and animals and amphibians cam first. Simply put, the first amphibians evolved from fish and the first reptiles evolved from amphibians.
amphibians
amphibians
Geoffrey A. Hammerson has written: 'Amphibians and Reptiles in Colorado' -- subject(s): Amphibians, Reptiles 'Amphibians and Reptiles in Colorado'
No. Amphibians and reptiles are vertebrates and thus have an endoskeleton like we do.
Herpetology is the study of the role of amphibians and reptiles.