The sugar glider is a marsupial
A female sugar glider.
A female sugar glider.
Get an e-collar on the sugar glider to prevent the glider from self-mutilating, and then rush the sugar glider to an exotic vet immediately.
The sugar glider live in the canopy .
There is no specific species known as a "little sugar glider".However, the conservation status of the sugar glider is common.
In its natural habitat of Australia, the sugar glider is quite common.
The sugar glider's conservation status is "common".
There are no other names for sugar gliders. There are, however, five other varieties of glider which are related to sugar gliders. These include the Feathertail glider, Mahogany glider, Greater glider, Yellow-bellied glider and Squirrel glider. People have made up names for sugar gliders such as "sugar babies" and "honey gliders", but these and other similar names are not legitimate names for sugar gliders.
If the female lasts long enough, she could give birth to a sugar glider.
No. The Sugar Glider is its own unique self.
No, a sugar glider is of the order Marsupialia, and a chipmunk is of the order Rodentia. It is not even a plausible question to ask. That would be like saying can a bald eagle (Order Accipitriformes) and a wild turkey (Order Galliformes) mate? Because they are both birds. A sugar glider is not even a rodent. A hybrid could possibly be made from two different sub-species, such as a zorse (zebra[Equus quagga] and a horse[Equus ferus caballus]), however the offspring would be sterile. You just made this world that much less educated..
By a male and female sugar glider that breed together, your product is a baby sugar glider also know as a joey ;)