Neither. A shark is a cartilaginous fish. Furthermore. A marsupials are mammals and none of them are oviparous.
No. Marsupials are a division of mammals. A shark is not a mammal at all. It is a cartilagenous fish.
marsupial (I have a 100% correct on this one because i have the same analogy as this and I got the answer right)
an oviparous shark is a shark that lays eggs.
The Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) is a carnivorous marsupial mammal that is native to Tasmania. They do not lay eggs.
No, a tiger shark is not a marsupial.
A marsupial is a mammal.A deer is not a marsupial, which is a sub-group of the mammal classification. A deer is known as a placental mammal, or Eutherian.
A wallaroo is a marsupial.
An ibex is not a marsupial. It is a placental mammal.
An elephant is a mammal, not a marsupial.
A mammal which is not a marsupial or a monotreme is called a placental mammal. There is no opposite to a marsupial. An animal is either a marsupial or it is not. Marsupial is the term given to any mammal of the order Marsupialia whose young are born in an immature state and continue development in the "marsupium" (or pouch).
Neither. Possums, or at least true possums, which are found in Australia, are marsupials.
A kangaroo is a marsupial mammal.