Yes. "Mammals" includes placental mammals (most of us that bear young alive, have warm blood and hair), marsupials (opossums, kangaroos and koala bears etc.)which bear young at a very early stage of development and carry them in a pouch in the mother's body as they mature and monotremes, animals like the echidna and platypus, which lay eggs, and still suckle their young.
They are Marsupials.
because koalas are marsupials and bears are mammals Marsupials are mammals too..But in no way related to the bear family (Ursidae)
No. Beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals.
Bobcats are not marsupials. They are placental mammals, while marsupials are pouched mammals.
marsupials are mammals. they're a specific classification of mammals with pouches.
Monotremes and marsupials are both types of mammals along with placental mammals
No, horses are equine mammals. They are not marsupials
Marsupials actually are mammals. They have hair and feed their babies milk.
Monotremes, marsupials, and placental mammals.
Koalas and kangaroos are both mammals with pouches in which they rear their young. They are marsupials, and almost all species of marsupials have a pouch for this purpose.
Neither. Elephants are placental mammals, which form a different group of mammals from either the marsupials (pouched mammals) or the monotremes (egg-laying mammals).
Yes. All mammals, including marsupials, have the following characteristics:a body covering of fur, skin or hairsuckle the young on mothers' milkwarm-blooded vertebrates which breathe through lungswith the exception of platypuses and echidnas which are monotremes, or egg laying mammals, all other mammals including marsupials give birth to live young