Yes.
The quokka is a marsupial, and one of the smaller members of the kangaroo family. Similar to a wallaby, it is actually in a separate classification of its own. It is smaller and stockier than wallabies.
Quokkas are mammals: they have fur. (Fur and hair are essentially the same.)
Quokkas a mammals, like humans, so they share various mammalian traits. These include feeding their young on mothers' milk, having hair, breathing through lungs and having a four-chambered heart. However, quokkas are marsupials while humans are placental mammals, so when it comes to reproduction, they are very different.
Quokkas are small members of the kangaroo family. Thus, they are mammals, and marsupials. They resemble small wallabies, with small rounded ears, and brown or greyish fur. So no, they are not fish. Fish are cold-blooded, have a covering of scales, and breathe using gills. All mammals are warm-blooded and breathe using lungs. Quokkas, like many other mammals, have a covering of fur.
A large group of quokkas is called a colony. Quokkas live in colonies in southwest Western Australia.
I think you mean where do Quokkas live? Quokkas live in Australia
Quokkas have no interest in biting anything except the vegetation on which they feed.
no, quokkas don't eat other animals.
No. Quokkas are endemic to southwest Western Australia.
Quokkas tend to give birth to a single joey at a time.
Quokkas are grazing animals. They feed on grasses, sedges, succulents, and foliage of shrubs.
Quokkas do not bite people or other animals. They use their teeth to bite the vegetation on which they feed.
The collective noun for quokkas is a "kindle." Quokkas are small marsupials native to Australia, known for their friendly and curious nature. The term "kindle" reflects their social behavior, as they are often seen in groups.