Yes. All female kangaroos have a pouch.
Yes. Young female kangaroos do have pouches. Males never develop a pouch.
Given that female kangaroos of reproductive age are in an almost perpetual state of pregnancy, the answer is "yes".
A female kangaroo has just one pouch.
because they have pouches.
No. Marsupials have pouches. Marsupials include kangaroos, koalas, wallabies and so on.
No, only the female. The pouch is where the tiny young kangaroo crawls to develop further, attached to a teat. Only female kangaroos have pouches just as only female mammals have a uterus. The sole purpose of the pouch is to give the underdeveloped baby a safe place to grow and feed until it is old enough to live independently of its mother.
of course! they keep them in their pouches.
No. People are not kangaroos by any means. They do not have pouches.
Among kangaroos, seahorses, and anteaters, only kangaroos have a pouch. Female kangaroos have a pouch where they carry and nurse their young after birth. Seahorses do not have pouches; instead, male seahorses carry fertilized eggs in a special brood pouch until they hatch. Anteaters also lack pouches, as they give birth to live young that cling to their mother's back.
There are no disadvantages of pouches for kangaroos. The pouch is a unique and versatile adaptation that equips the kangaroo to care for its young in Australia's uncertain and sometimes harsh environment.
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.
Kangaroos carry their babies in special pouches on their bellies.