Feathertail gliders are native to Australia. For this reason, they are not domesticated, as Australia's native wildlife is generally not domesticated.
"Pygmy glider" is another name for the smallest species of glider, the Feathertail Glider. Like all gliders, it belongs to the possum family (which is different from the 'opossum' family), and so it is a marsupial.
A feathertail glider usually carries up to 3 joeys in its pouch at a time. Four young can be born, but sadly, one usually dies before reaching maturity.
Australian sugar gliders have a slightly larger body size and their fur tends to have more gray tones compared to Indonesian sugar gliders. In terms of behavior, Australian sugar gliders may be more active and energetic than Indonesian sugar gliders. Additionally, Australian sugar gliders are more commonly kept as pets in the United States compared to Indonesian sugar gliders.
Quite simply: Sugar gliders are native to Australia, and Australian mammals do not migrate.
There are no other names for sugar gliders. There are, however, five other varieties of glider which are related to sugar gliders. These include the Feathertail glider, Mahogany glider, Greater glider, Yellow-bellied glider and Squirrel glider. People have made up names for sugar gliders such as "sugar babies" and "honey gliders", but these and other similar names are not legitimate names for sugar gliders.
Feathertail Gliders eat mainly nectar and pollen from Banksia flowers. Their tongues have special fine hairs on the tips which help them collect nectar and pollen.Feathertails do eat sap, as well as pollen and nectar from other plants. They also eat small arthropods such as lerps.
Many birds and mammals make their homes in eucalyptus trees. They include koalas, ringtail possums, brushtail possums, sugar gliders, feathertail gliders, kookaburras, cockatoos, galahs, lorikeets, rosellas and magpies, just to name a few.
Feathertail Gliders eat mainly nectar and pollen from Banksia flowers. Their tongues have special fine hairs on the tips which help them collect nectar and pollen.Feathertails do eat sap, as well as pollen and nectar from other plants. They also eat small arthropods such as lerps.
Sugar gliders have been introduced into Indonesia from Australia.
Perhaps some fish are smaller than mice. Every living thing is a specie.
No, sugar gliders have no need to store food. They are native Australian animals, and in their habitat they do not suffer from a shortage of food during different seasons.