The answer is girl/female !
By a male and female sugar glider that breed together, your product is a baby sugar glider also know as a joey ;)
idk I wanna know too
Yes, after about a half of year, or maybe a year. (depending on your sugar glider) Your cute little sugar glider has to be used to you and you have to be used to him/her. You CANNOT CANNOT snuggle your sugar glider unless you know you will be able to have a little bit of control so they dont go under you couch or anything bad like that. So just be careful. So yes the short answer is yes. You would snuggle you sugar glider as simply as putting him/her on your shoulder.
well if you want to know, there is only one sugar glider and a lot of people. FIGURE IT OUT
The sugar bear is not a bear, it is an opposum. For a long time it was called the sugar glider. I don't know when people started referring to it as the sugar bear. Its Latin name is Petaurus breviceps.
Yes. But it also depends if the teenager is responsible and willing to commit to taking care of the animal for a minimum of 10 years. No. A sugar glider is not a good pet for a teenager because sugar gliders are a 10-15 year commitment. The teenager does not know where they will be in 10-15 years, and will be unable to take the glider with them to college. Sugar gliders are also very expensive pets to keep -- most teenagers cannot afford them.
A sugar glider is a small, nocturnal marsupial of the possum family (not opossums) about 16cm-21cm in length, and native to Australia, as well as some islands of Indonesia and New Guinea. Sugar gliders live about 12-15 years in captivity, and 1-6 years in the wild, due to predation by other animals. They have black-tipped tails, a black line down their back, (ending with an arrow on the head) and have 1-3 joeys at a time. They come in a variety of colors, including albino (very rare), cinnamon, red-brown and, most commonly, grey. Like other gliders, sugar gliders are unique in that they have a membrane of skin - patagia-membrane - which stretches from the fifth "finger" of each hand to the first toe of each foot, which enables them to glide between treetops. They do not fly, but are capable of gliding up to 100m.
This seems to depend on the type of leaves and bark given to the sugar glider, and of course the individual sugar glider. My own gliders love eucalyptus leaves, but I know of many gliders that do not. Before you attempt to introduce any sort of leaves and bark to your sugar gliders, please be sure that it is not toxic, and that it has been properly cared for (no pesticides).
Well a Sugar glider can live in many different habitats and environments. The ones that I know of is a little nest that the build in/on a tree. If the Sugar glider's nest is in the tree.... there will be a big hole in a tree branch with multiple twigs and leaves. Though if this adorable animal is living on the tree it is almost like a bird nest but, there are a bunch of leaves. These creatures use twigs for the structure and make the rest with leaves. Unlike, a Sugar glider's nest some birds use mud and when I've seen multiple bird nests they use more twigs than leaves.
nothing because vampires arent really REAL
I don't know. I know how a male sugar glider's reproductive tract is organized, though. Like most male marsupials, a male sugar glider has a two-pronged (Y-shaped) penis, so as to fit into the female's two vaginas. The penis is not used to urinate; it is used only to release semen. In front (not behind) of the penis are the testicles. No, I'm not a pervert. I just happen to know some biology.
Sugar gliders weight to its bodyis 120mm long and the tail has lenlength of 150 - 480mm. The size you don't need to know about because if you look at sugargliders for pets or look it up you will see how small a sugar glider is. A sugar gliders color is brown,whiteshades,and has a lond line down to its tail.Their scientific name is (PETAURUS BREVICEPS) and if you must know its tazonomy is ANIMALIA CHORDATA MAMMALIA DIPROTODONTIA PETAURIDE PETUROUS. Also if you want to know for sites please don't copy just look at animal diversty.web and that's all thank you.