Yes. Wallabies are mammals, and all mammals are vertebrates.
No. Wallabies are marsupials, a sub-group of mammals. Chicks are baby birds.
Yes. Specifically, wallabies are marsupials, which are pouched mammals.
All mammals are vertebrates, including wallabies.
Whales Wolves Wharf Rat Wallabies Wombat (Yes, marsupials are pouched mammals)
Kangaroos and wallabies are not members of the rat family. They bear very little relation to rats apart from the fact that they are mammals. Kangaroos and wallabies are marsupials or pouched mammals, whilst rats and other rodents are placental mammals. Other members of the rodent family include beavers, muskrats, porcupines, woodchucks, chipmunks, squirrels, prairie dogs, marmots, chinchillas, voles, lemmings, hamsters, gerbils, coypu, pacas, capybara and tuco-tucos.
No. A wallaby is a mammal, specifically a marsupial.
The echidna and the platypus are non-placental mammals. They are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. Kangaroos, wallabies, koalas, bandicoots, wombats and Tasmanian devils are just a few other non-placentals, as they are marsupials.
Marsupials have baby pouches. Kangaroos, wallabies, possums, and some others.
Both wallabies and Tasmanian Tigers (Thylacines) are mammals, specifically marsupials. Tasmanian Tigers are believed to be extinct, and many species of wallaby are heading in the same direction, due to man's interference.
Kangaroos and wallabies are both marsupials in the family macropodidae, meaning "long footed".
Kangaroos are related to all other mammals of the Macropod family (or kangaroo family), Macropodidae, of which there are over 60 species. The kangaroo family encompasses other marsupials such as the wallaby, potoroo, bettong, pademelon, rat-kangaroo, tree kangaroo and wallaroo.