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.
The platypus is not a marsupial. It is a monotreme, or egg-laying mammal. Marsupials give birth to live young.
No, a cat does not have a pouch, and its young are born fully developed. It is a placental mammal.
Yes. All members of the kangaroo family are marsupials. This includes over 60 species of kangaroo.
A turtle is a reptile, not a marsupial. Marsupials are a sub-group of mammals.
Yes. Kangaroos are marsupials. The female has a pouch in which she rears the young joey.
No: a hedgehog is a placental mammal.
No. Rabbits are not marsupials.
Marsupial
No. A lynx is not a marsupial. It is a type of cat.
I would say it is different because the opossum is marsupial and the cat is not so there birth of there kids would be different
Parallel evolution is where two separate species evolve similar morphological forms. An excellent example is the saber toothed cat. Several different types of cat evolved "saber" teeth, including one very "cat-like" marsupial. Imagine, a saber-toothed marsupial!
All four quoll species are nocturnal marsupials.
A quoll is a carnivorous marsupial, native to Australia and New Guinea. It is a member of the group of animals known as dasyurids (carnivorous marsupials). It is a terrestrial animal, adept at climbing trees. It is cat-like in size and, because of its rounded head, small ears and long tail, has in the past has been referred to as a "native cat", though it is not related to the cat family at all.
A mammal that is not a monotreme nor marsupial. It could be a monkey, a dog or cat, any mammal really.
It is a vertebrate. A Chuditch is a marsupial, also known as a Quoll or Native Cat and is native to Australia and New Guinea. All mammals, such as the chuditch, are vertebrates because they have a backbone (vertebrae).See related links for more information about this carnivorous marsupial.
No, an alpaca is not a marsupial.
No. The star-nosed marsupial is not a marsupial, but a placental mammal. The only marsupial moles are found in northern Australia.
I would say it is different because the opossum is marsupial and the cat is not so there birth of there kids would be different
There is no such animal as the "southern marsupial". However, if there was such an animal, it would mist likely be a marsupial. The vast majority of marsupial species are nocturnal.