Kangaroos and opossums both belong to the group of animals known as marsupials.
These animals are all members of the marsupial group, a sub-group of mammals.
No. Both animals are marsupials, but that is the closest relationship they have.
pewp
No..It is a primate..Marsupials have pouches..Kangaroos, numbats, opossums and wombats are marsupials.
Possums and kangaroos are both warmblooded mammals, specifically, marsupials. Both these creatures give birth to very undeveloped live young which then continue most of their development in the mother's pouch.Many species of possums and kangaroos are herbivorous, although the smaller species of each are omnivorous, living also on insects and/or insect larvae. (Kangaroo does not refer to just wallabies, Red kangaroos and the Grey kangaroos - there are several small desert-dwelling species of macropod).
No, hedgehogs are not marsupials. Marsupials is the group of mammals that carry their babies in pouches. Some marsupials are kangaroos, opossums, surprisingly koalas!
Marsupials give birth to partially developed young - examples: kangaroos, wombats, opossums, koalas.
The ancestor of the saber tooth was a marsupial, making it more closely related to kangaroos and opossums than to tigers.
Animals with pouches are the marsupials and includes kangaroos, opossums, koalas, wombats, wallabies, Tasmanian devils, etc.
We wouldn't have kangaroos.
The brown bear does not belong. It is a placental mammal, not a marsupial like the others in the list.
Opossums are quite different to possums. They are different species, native to different continents and have absolutely no relation to each other beyond both being marsupials.
Although the Opossum in America has a "rat-like" tail, they are marsupials. They have pouches to carry their young in, similar to the famous kangaroo or koala. Upon closer inspection, their tail is different from a rat's along with their fur. Their tail is able to be controlled and has a grip on it, and is quite strong.
Have you ever heard of a kangaroo? Not only kangaroos but also wombats, opossums, koalas, platypus, echidna, crocodiles, emus, kookaburras, snakes, dingos, and others
Animals that have pouches belong to the class of mammals called Marsupials. Marsupials include kangaroos, bandicoots, wombats, banded anteaters, koalas, opossums, wallabies, Tasmanian devils, and many other species that I cannot name.