The thylacine had fur, was warm-blooded, fed its young with milk, and gave live birth, making it a mammal.
The thylacine gave birth to its young very undeveloped, so they had to attach to the mother's nipple, after being born, in order to gain the necessary nutrients. The thylacine had a pouch in which the young were protected. These characteristics made it a marsupial. The thylacine was one of only two marsupials where both the males and the females had pouches. However, the male's pouch was for the purpose of proteins its genitals, not for nurturing the joeys. Like other marsupials, the female thylacine had two vaginas, or what are called paired lateral vaginae. These were for the purpose of transporting the sperm to the womb, but there was a midline pseudovaginal canal for actually giving birth. As well as two vaginas and two uteruses, female thylacines, like other marsupials, had two fallopian tubes and two cervixes.
A Thylacine was a consumer, and a mammal, specifically a carnivorous marsupial known as a dasyurid.
The thylacine, now extinct, was a mammal. It was a marsupial, or pouched mammal. It was also in the group own as Dasyurids, which refers to the carnivorous marsupials.
The Thylacine (the correct name for the Tasmanian tiger) was a marsupial mammal: therefore, it was a vertebrate.
Wloves and thylacines have nothing in common apart from both being carnivorous members of the mammal family, and thereby sharing characteristics of mammals. This is where they begin to depart, however, as the wolf is a placental mammal and the thylacine was a marsupial (it is now extinct).
The thylacine is now extinct. However, some of its unique characteristics were:It was a dasyurid, or carnivorous marsupial, which could open its jaws to 120 degrees, which is wider than any other mammal can open its jaws.The female had a pouch (being a marsupial) for the purpose of nurturing the young joeys. However, the male also had a pouch which protected his reproductive organs when he ran through the thick undergrowth of the Tasmanian wilderness.
The tiger is not a marsupial. It is a placvental mammal. The now-extinct "Tasmanian tiger" was a marsupial, but it was not a member of the tiger family. Its real name was "thylacine" and it was only given the designation of Tasmanian tiger because of its stripes.
The tiger is not a marsupial. It is a placvental mammal. The now-extinct "Tasmanian tiger" was a marsupial, but it was not a member of the tiger family. Its real name was "thylacine" and it was only given the designation of Tasmanian tiger because of its stripes.
The correct name for the Tasmanian wolf was Thylacine. This animal, which was also known as the Tasmanian Tiger, was a mammal. Specifically, it was a marsupial of the dasyuridae family, or carnivorous marsupials. It is now extinct.
A marsupial is a mammal.A deer is not a marsupial, which is a sub-group of the mammal classification. A deer is known as a placental mammal, or Eutherian.
An ibex is not a marsupial. It is a placental mammal.
A wallaroo is a marsupial.
An elephant is a mammal, not a marsupial.