No: They grow like other mammals. At birth they are about 2 cm in size, as they are marsupials, which are born very tiny and undeveloped. They eventually reach about 50 cm in length and 25 cm in height as adults.
Tasmanian Devils give birth to live young, which are born about the size of a bean. These tiny creatures move by instinct to crawl into the mother Tasmanian Devil's pouch, where they latch onto a teat. The teat swells in their mouth, and there they stay, firmly anchored, until they are ready to start leaving the pouch for short periods of time.
Female Tasmanian devils carry their young joeys for around 100 days, or just over three months. This equates to about fourteen weeks.
Yes and no. Holes in the ground, such as old wombat burrows, are ideal hiding places for nocturnal animals to shelter in during the day. However, the Tasmanian devil is also known to shelter in caves and amid the dense understorey of vegetation in their habitat.
The average life span of a Tasmanian devil is 6-8 years. They are more likely to live longer in captivity, as in the wild they are prone to being hit by cars. The Devil Facial Tumour Disease (DFTD) has also reduced the life expectancy of at least one third of wild Tasmanian devils.
Baby Tasmanian devils, known as joeys, stay in the mother's pouch for about 4 months, or 16 weeks. After this, they are transferred to a burrow or den for another four months. They will stay here for around 10 months, by which time they are old enough to leave their mother. Altogether, they stay with the mother until they about a year and a half old.
Yes. Tasmanian devils are marsupials, and the females have a pouch in which the young are carried for around 100 days, or just over three months. The pouch faces backwards, like that of the wombat, so it does not get filled with dirt while the animal is digging.
No
They may be dangerous when provoked and can cause bites and wounds to an adult human but are not critically dangerous. They are mostly scavengers and do not attack prey that is larger than young Kangaroos. Tasmanian devils, despite their reputation, are actually timid and shy creatures which would rather hide from people than confront them. They never attack people, but will certainly defend themselves, and they have exceptionally powerful jaws.
Liquids cannot stay the same size size because the particles inside the liquids have some bit of space to move to a different shape and to change the size.
sure
Density of the substance will always stay the same. Density of the object will also stay the same if solid, no matter the size, but not if it is carved out. That is why a steel boat can float
in isotonic solutions.