No. An otter is a placental mammal. Marsupials give birth to undeveloped young, which must cling to the nipple for several weeks before they are developed enough to survive off it. Placental mammals give birth to much more developed young, and they only need to suckle some of the time.
A sea Otter is not a marsupial, so doesn't have a pouch like a kangaroo.
River Otter (3 species), Sea Otter, Giant Otter, Hairy Nosed Otter, Japanese Otter, European Otter, Spotted Necked Otter, Marine Otter, African Clawless Otter, Oriental Small Clawed Otter. 13 species
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.
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.
An elephant is a mammal, not a marsupial.
NO. a marsupial carries it young in a pouch.
An ibex is not a marsupial. It is a placental mammal.
No, a tiger shark is not a marsupial.
A marsupial has a skin covering of fur.
Marsupial is not a compound word.
A wallaroo is a marsupial.