No. Kangaroos are marsupials. Mammals which do not have pouches and do not lay eggs are placental mammals. This covers creatures such as people, dogs, cats, rodents, livestock, cheetahs, etc.
No. The wombat is a marsupial, not a placental mammal. This means the young do not develop in the mother's uterus, but in a pouch.
No. The platypus is a monotreme, which is an egg-laying mammal. It does not give live birth.
It's a bird and it lays eggs.
Yes, yes it is. A wombat is an Australian mammal.
yes it is a marsupial animal
Yes it is.
Yes, that is correct
wombat wombatbombatWombat (an animal)
Hairy-Nosed Wombat is the emblem for South Australia
wombat
Elephants are placental mammals. Marsupials have a pouch (which elephants don't) and monotremes lay eggs (which elephants CERTAINLY don't)
Wombats are solitary animals. They do not have "friends".
The Marine Wombat. In an effort to raise awareness of the "severely endangered" status of these unique creatures, the UN has decreed that all European nations shall adopt the marine wombat as their national animal.
The name 'wombat' has no other meaning in the aboriginal dialect. It is derived from an Eora name for the animal.
All female placental mammals.