Not at all. Their only relationship is that they are both mammals, and even then, mice are placental mammals and kangaroos are marsupials.
No animal most closely related is chimp
Not closely related, but all life is based on DNA, and therefore related.
A bettong is a marsupial of the genus Bettongia, closely related to kangaroos and resembling rats.
Kangaroo mice are quite different to kangaroos, kangaroo rats and rat-kangaroos. There are two species of kangaroo mice in North America, but several more species in Australia. They are quite unrelated to kangaroos or rat-kangaroos, but they are related to the North America kangaroo rats. Kangaroo mice in Australia are more commonly known as native hopping mice.There are several species of hopping mice, and they tend to inhabit sandy deserts, rather than grasslands.
Humans are more closely related to mice. Humans and mice are both mammals whereas snakes are reptiles.
Kangaroos, wallaroos and wallabies are closely related.Wallabies, in fact, are kangaroos. They form one of the major sub-groups of kangaroos in Australia.Other close relatives are potoroos, rat-kangaroos, bettongs and quokkas.Wallabies are a member of Family Macropodidae.
Cats and mice are more closely related in terms of their predator-prey relationship. However, cats and dogs are more closely related in terms of their shared domestication history as both have been kept as pets by humans for centuries.
Mice are rodents (2 front teeth top and bottom) and rabbits are Lagomorphs (four front teeth top and bottom) so not closely related.
Not at all.Sugar gliders are marsupials, and members of the possum family. They are native to Australia.Flying squirrels are placental mammals, and members of the rodent family. There are no squirrels, flying or otherwise, in Australia.There is a type of glider in Australia known as a squirrel glider, but it is a glider and not a squirrel.
The ancestor of the saber tooth was a marsupial, making it more closely related to kangaroos and opossums than to tigers.
Koalas are not in the kangaroo family, which is Macropodidae, or the macropods.However, koalas are in the same Order as the kangaroo, which is Diprotodontia.
two mammals are mice and kangaroos