No. Pouched mammals, or marsupials, give birth to live young.The only egg-laying mammals are the monotremes.
Pouched mammals are called marsupials, they give birth very early and the young live in a special pouch till they are able to live on their own.
No. Koalas do not lay eggs, Koalas are mammals, specifically marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals, not egg-laying mammals. Mammals give birth to live young, with the exception of monotremes, i.e. platypuses and echidnas, which are also unique to Australia.
Pandas are mammals because they give birth to babies and nurse them with milk.Yes. They give live birth, have fur, and feed their babies with milk. They are traditional mammals and not monotremes (egg-laying mammals, like the platypus), or marsupials (pouched mammals, like kangaroos).
No, sugar gliders are mammals and do not lay eggs. Because they are marsupials, gliders birth undeveloped babies that continue to grow in the mother's pouch. These babies are called joeys.
Yes.yes theyre primates, which are mammals.
Cheetahs, like all cats, are mammals. They nurse their young. Except for monotremes like the platypus, they give birth to live young.YesYesYes it is. It has fur, breathes air, gives birth to live young and feeds their young with milk they produce.Of course a cheetah is a mammal why wouldn't it be?
Mammals.
Wallabys give birth to a joey about the size of a kidney bean. The joey crawls up a trail that the mother licks on her belly up into the pouch. The joey crawls into the pouch and attaches to a nipple and remains in the pouch for several months. Wallabys belong to the Marsupials. That group includes kangaroos, opossums, koalas, wombats and some other species found in Australia.
No. All marsupials give birth to live, undeveloped young. Monotremes are the only mammals to lay eggs. Monotremes include just the platypus and the echidna.
Platypuses are mammals, but not marsupials (pouched mammals). They are monotremes, that is, egg-laying mammals. After a short gestation period, the mother lays an egg containing the baby. About ten days later, the egg hatches, and the baby emerges. Marsupials also have short gestation periods, but after it is done, there is live birth. Baby marsupials crawl from the birth canal to the mother's nipple, to which they attach themselves for several weeks.
No. Mammals which lay eggs are monotremes. Placental mammals and marsupials give live birth.