Honey Badgers and Stink Badgers both use their scent glands for defense but both animals belonged in separate families Honey Badgers belong to the family Melidae while Stink Badgers belong to the family Mephitidae honey badgers and true badgers also belonged to the superfamily Musteloidea making them most closely related to weasels, martens, and otters while skunks and stink badgers both belong to the superfamily Procyonoidea making them more closely related to raccoons, red pandas, and coatis.
Skunks belong to a different family than honey badgers. They both belong to the same superfamily, though, which is Musteloidea. So they are not super closely related, but they are somewhat related.
Yes, badgers do like honey. If you find a set you should smother the grass outside with honey and sit quietly at night. The badgers will then come out but if you make a noise they will retreat.
No. They are completely different types of mammals. Honey badges are placental mammals, while Tasmanian devils are marsupials.
No
Honey badgers are not native to the US. They are native to Africa, the Middle East, and India.
There are Eurasian badgers, hog badgers, American badgers, ferret badgers, honey badgers, and stink badgers. I'm guessing that your question was, "What kinds of badgers are there?"
honey of coarse
Yes
For no reason!
yes
Totally!!