Yes, the kangaroo is a vertebrate.
A kangaroo is a vertebrate the same way all mammals are vertebrates, because every mammal (and hence kangaroo) has a backbone.
Gorillas are vertebrates. They belong to the group of animals called mammals, all of which are vertebrates because they have a backbone or spinal column.
The wallaby is the smallest of the three. However, they are all members of the kangaroo family, and the smallest kangaroo is the musky rat-kangaroo: in which case, the kangaroo is the smallest.
There is no Hawaiian word for kangaroo, just as there is no English word for Kangaroo.
You could use "marsupial" but that applies to other animals as well. To refer to something as "of or like" a kangaroo, you would use the word kangaroo as an adjunct noun (kangaroo fur) or possessive (kangaroo's pouch).
Yes, a kangaroo has a backbone and is classified as a vertebrate.
Yes. Kangaroo rats are mammals, and therefore need to breathe oxygen, like all vertebrates.
A kangaroo is a vertebrate the same way all mammals are vertebrates, because every mammal (and hence kangaroo) has a backbone.
Yes. Like all mammals, kangaroos are vertebrates, which means they have backbones.
Being a mammal, a kangaroo is a vertebrate. All mammals are vertebrates, because every mammal has a backbone. They are members of the subphylum Vertebrata, chordates with backbones or spinal columns.
Yes. Kangaroos, like humans, are vertebrates, which are a subset of chordates (having a dorsal nerve cord).
Koalas have bilateral symmetry, as all vertebrates do.
They are all vertebrates and found in the region of Oceania, which includes Australia, New Zealand and New Guinea.
Vertebrates are animals with backbones. Not all vertebrates are mammals, however. Vertebrates also include reptiles, amphibians, birds, and fish. Mammals do constutute a substantial number of vertebrates, but only a small fraction of the total species. Mammals include: monotremes (platypus,echidna) marsupials (kangaroo, opossum) marine mammals (whales, dolphins) semi-aquatic mammals (seals, sea lions) bats shrews, moles, and rodents hoofed animals felines, canines, and bears primates (apes, monkeys, man)
Like all mammals, red kangaroos and all other species of kangaroos 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.
The only things these three creatures have in common is that they are all vertebrates, and they all use a hopping motion as their primary means of movement.
Yes. A bilby is a small, large-eared marsupial that lives in semi-arid areas of the Australian outback. The bilby is critically endangered, with just small colonies of this marsupial left in a few pockets of land.