Marsupial has to do with how the young are born and cared for. Carnivore is about what they eat.
There are carnivore marsupials - like the Tasmanian Devil.
Sloths are mammals, NOT marsupials, and NOT carnivores.
A sloth is a mammal and a herbivour.
A sloth is a mammal
Kangaroos and wallabies are both marsupials in the family macropodidae, meaning "long footed".
No. Baboons are placental mammals, not marsupials.
No. Lemurs are placental mammals, not marsupials, so they do not have pouches.
Mammals are a class of animals with similar attributes, including vertebrates, air breathing, possession of hair, and many more. There are many sub-categories, but whether they are carnivores herbivores or omnivores are based on how they adapted to their environment. We are omnivores, and lions are carnivores. Yet, we are both mammals.
Sloths are herbivores because they eat fruit , leaves, buds, and young twigs.
No. All sloths are placental mammals.
No. Koalas are marsupials, and the only member of the family Phascolarctidae. Sloths are placental mammals, and are divided into several families, none of which is Phascolarctidae.
Kangaroos and wallabies are both marsupials in the family macropodidae, meaning "long footed".
No. Beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals.
Sloths are mammals and all mammals have bones.
Bobcats are not marsupials. They are placental mammals, while marsupials are pouched mammals.
marsupials are mammals. they're a specific classification of mammals with pouches.
Monotremes and marsupials are both types of mammals along with placental mammals
A vertebrate, since sloths are mammals and all mammals are vertebrates.
yesYes. A sloth is a mammal. It has fur and it feeds its young on mothers' milk.
Marsupials actually are mammals. They have hair and feed their babies milk.
No, horses are equine mammals. They are not marsupials