Yes: quolls are marsupials. They are dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials, feeding on birds and smaller mammals.
Yes, quolls are predators. They belong to a group of animals known as the dasyurids, which are carnivorous marsupials. Quolls prey on smaller mammals and marsupials, birds, lizards and smaller snakes.
Not at all. Quolls are arboreal (tree-dwelling) marsupials, as they are nimble climbers.
Quolls can be quite aggressive. As carnivorous marsupials, they need a certain degree of aggression in order to catch their prey.
Quoll are carnivorous marsupials. They do not eat berries.
There is not the remotest similarity, either physiologically or behaviourally, between quolls, carnivorous marsupials, and starfish, marine invertebrates.
Tiger quolls are neither "good" nor "bad", as these are terms describing human qualities. Tiger quolls are carnivorous marsupials. They keep to themselves, and hunt in order to survive.
No. Spotted tailed quolls, like all quolls, are marsupials. They are born live, though very undeveloped. Only the platypus and echidna, which are monotremes, come from eggs.
Quolls are marsupials; marsupials are mammals; and all mammals belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya, members of which are characterised by having cells with nuclei. Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
Quolls pose no threat and are not deadly to humans. Being carnivorous marsupials, they are deadly to other small mammals up to the size of a possum, as well as being deadly to birds and arthropods.
Predators of the tiny musky-rat kangaroo include dingoes, wild dogs and quolls. Quolls are carnivorous marsupials, sometimes incorrectly called "native cats".
All quoll species are marsupials and all marsupials are mammals. All mammals are vertebrates as they have a backbone (spine or vertebral column). Thus all quolls are vertebrates!
Yes. Quolls are carnivorous marsupials, about the size of a cat, and they certainly bite in order to capture and feed on their prey. They are protected animals and not captured by humans, but if they were, they would bite hard in order to gain freedom. Quolls raised in protective captivity are more likely to be used to being handled.