marsupial
Marsupial
All marsupial young are known as joeys. Almost all marsupials carry their young in a pouch (the numbat, for example, does not have a pouch).
An animal like the opossum and kangaroo that carry their young in a pouch after birth, is called a marsupial. (marr-SOOP-ee-uhl)
A hamster is not an animal that has a pouch. It carries its young in its uterus until birth.
Pelican (was thought to feed her young of her own flesh)Wolf (one raised Romulus and Remus, another raised Mowgli)Opossum (carries her young on her back)Kangaroo (carries her young in a pouch)Crocodile (carries her young in her mouth)
NO. a marsupial carries it young in a pouch.
A kangaroo is an example of a mammal that carries their young in a pouch. The joey, or baby kangaroo, develops inside the mother's pouch after being born extremely premature.
A Kangaroo.
Monkeys and Gorillas mainly. Certain marsupials continue to carry their young on their back for several months, once the joeys have emerged permanently from the pouch. These are mainly the arboreal marsupials. Possums, koalas, quolls and cuscuses exhibit this behaviour.
If you mean pouch the answer is a mammal
A marsupial is an animal that has a pouch. A kangaroo has a pouch so it is considered a marsupial. A kangaroo uses the pouch to carry their young after they give birth.
The young of marsupials are born under-developed and complete their development in their mother's pouch.