Other marsupials include:
A marsupial is an animal that has a pouch. A kangaroo has a pouch so it is considered a marsupial. A kangaroo uses the pouch to carry their young after they give birth.
No. A marsupial is a mammal. It is warmblooded and has hair. A reptile is cold-blooded and has scales. A marsupial is also an animal that carries it's young in a pouch. kangaroo, opossum.
Tigers are viviparous; they are mammals that give birth to live young that have matured within the mother's body.
By the term "marsupial-like," I assume you are asking for a mammal that is like a marsupial but is not one. Colugos, which are placental mammals, are marsupial-like in that after a short gestation period (about 60 days), they give birth to rather undeveloped young which then cling to the mother's belly. The mother even makes a pouch by folding up her patagia (gliding membranes connecting the wrists and ankles) and her tail into one.
* cat * dog * horse * leopard * kangaroo * elephant * rhinoceros * lion * mouse * rabbit * koala * possum
Sure! One example is "mouse" which becomes "mice" in its plural form. Another example is "kangaroo" which becomes "kangaroos" in the plural form.
The koala is a marsupial. Monotremes are egg-laying mammals, and koalas do not lay eggs, but give birth to live young.
Not at all. Kangaroos are members of the marsupial family. Marsupials have been called the pouch family. Basically because they give birth to their babies early and the pouch is used to protect the baby while it continues its development. However, not all marsupials have pouches (for example, the numbat does not have a pouch but is still a marsupial).Some other marsupials that have pouches include:KoalasWombatsWallaroosWallabiesPossums (a different animal from Opossums)OpossumsKangaroos - the most famous of all the pouched mammalsBandicootGlider (a type of possum)Marsupial MouseMarsupial MolePlanigaleTasmanian DevilQuokkaQuollPhascogaleCuscus
It lives in Australia.
Where was it figured out that a kangaroo is faster than a horse?
They are aggressive hunters and one species, the phascogale, was even once called the 'vampire mouse'for how it hunted poultry. However, they will not attack humans except to give you a nasty nip if you handle them. Note that there is no actual species of animal known as the "marsupial mouse". This is a general term which refers to tiny dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials of Australia. Animals which come under the broad heading of marsupial mice include the antechinus, dibbler, ningaui, phascogale, planigale, kultarr, dunnart, kaluta, mulgara and kowari.
Yes. They are placental mammals, all of which give birth to live young. Kangaroo rats are not the same as rat kangaroos, which are Australian marsupials (and also give birth to live young).