No: the dingo, or Australian native dog, also known as the warrigal, is not a marsupial, but canine (Canis dingo) and a carnivorous mammal. It is found in all states of Australia except Tasmania.
Dingoes are meat eaters and also scavengers. They are lone hunters, rather than pack hunters. They are not native to Australia: some think they were brought there by the Koori people 5,000 years ago, while others think it was sea-farers doing trade.
Dingoes are mammals and, like all mammals, they are vertebrates because they have a spine and spinal cord, and an internal skeleton. They belong to the Phylum Chordata.
Mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians are all vertebrates.
Nope - Dingoes are mammals - belonging to the Dog family.
No, dingoes are mammals. They belong to a sub-species of the domestic dog.
Yes. Dingoes are placental mammals.
invertebrates
vertebrates and invertebrates different?
They are vertebrates.
Vertebrates have spinal chord and invertebrates don't.
Vertebrates have spines & invertebrates do not have spines.
Invertebrates.
invertebrates
all vertebrates have endoskeleton but not all invertebrates do
The chordata contains both vertebrates and invertebrates.
vertebrates
Vertebrates.
The major difference between vertebrates and invertebrates is that vertebrates have a back bone and invertebrates don't