Yes. Bandicoots give birth to undeveloped young, which then complete their development in the mother's pouch. This makes them marsupials.
Another feature they share with all marsupials is having two vaginas, or what are called paired lateral vaginae. These are for the purpose of transporting the sperm to the womb, but there is a midline pseudovaginal canal for actually giving birth. As well as two vaginas and two uteruses, female bandicoots have two fallopian tubes and two cervixes. Male bandicoots have a two-pronged penis to accommodate the females' two vaginas.
Yes, being a marsupial, the bandicoot does have a pouch, but only the spotted-tailed quoll has a fully developed pouch. The other species of quoll have shallow folds of skin around the teats, which protect the joeys at first. As the joeys grow, they cling to the hair on the mother's abdomen. When they are old enough, they are carried on the mother's back.
Yes bandicoots do have pouches for carrying babies
No. Bandicoots are not monotremes (egg-laying mammals) but marsupials. They give birth to live young.
Yes. All marsupials have cloacas.
No it lays eggs
Kangaroos carry their babies in special pouches on their bellies.
Not really. Seahorse females deposit their eggs into a male's pouch, who carries them until they hatch. But once hatched, the babies are outta there.
Lions don't have pouches
All mother kangaroos carry their young joeys in a pouch.
No, although it does seem like they do, sheep and goats carry their babies in the womb like humans.
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The Australian marsupial with a pouch and a prominent, pointed snout, is most likely the bilby, which is a type of bandicoot.
A quenda has a pouch. A Quenda is a Southern Brown Bandicoot; therefore, like all bandicoots, it is a marsupial, almost all of which are pouched mammals.
They sure do! The kangaroo babies are born in the normal way, then holding tightly to their mommy's hair, they crawl up the mommy's tummy until they find the pocket. The pocket is called a'Pouch'. When the babies get into the pouch, they quickly find the mommy's milk and then they drink milk whenever they are hungry. The babies grow and grow so that after awhile, the babies get to be so big that the mommy makes them get out of the pouch and live outside.
Remove the apostrophe.Marsupials are mammals that carry their babies in stomach pouches.Incidentally, not all marsupials are pouched. For some species, the "pouch" is nothing more than a flap of skin.
the babies are transferred into the male seahorses pouch, and when they are born they explode out of him , killing him :[
Kangaroos, and most marsupials, carry their offspring in a pouch. The correct term for the pouch is marsupium.