They are considered to be arboreal marsupials.
They are considered to be arboreal marsupials.
There are no marsupial bats. Marsupials keep there newborn in a pouch, bats do not.
No. Very few marsupials are semi-arboreal. The Brushtail possum is considered semi-arboreal.
No, bats are mammals but not marsupials, as they do not have a pouch like most marsupials do. Bats are placental mammals.
No, bats are not marsupials, they are placentals, just like humans, whales, cats and cows.
No, elephants are not marsupials. Elephants are considered placental mammals.
No. marsupials are not considered primitive. They just have a different method of reproduction.
There is no one, specific place where the most marsupials are found in Australia. Marsupials are found in the vast plains of the outback; in the rugged Great Dividing Range in the east and south; in the coastal plains - everywhere.
No. While most native mammals in Australia (apart from bats and monotremes) are marsupials, there are numerous species of native rodents. The Spinifex Hopping Mouse is also known as the Tarrkawarra, and it is a rodent, not a marsupial.
Neither. Bats are placental mammals, so they neither have a pouch, nor do they lay eggs.
mega marsupials are dead and marsupials arent