Baby kangaroo
Yes. All female kangaroos have a pouch.
A female kangaroo has just one pouch.
Yes. Young female kangaroos do have pouches. Males never develop a pouch.
Yes. female kangaroos and other marsupials are the only ones with a pouch. The exception to this was the now-extinct Thylacine (Tasmanian tiger): the male Thylacine had a pouch to protect his reproductive parts when he went running through the dense bushland.
Female kangaroos' nipples are located within their pouch, on their abdomen.
No, only the female. The pouch is where the tiny young kangaroo crawls to develop further, attached to a teat. Only female kangaroos have pouches just as only female mammals have a uterus. The sole purpose of the pouch is to give the underdeveloped baby a safe place to grow and feed until it is old enough to live independently of its mother.
no no gender of kangroo has a pouch
All members of the kangaroo family move with a hopping motion, and the female carries her joey in a pouch. They include:kangaroopotorooquokkawallabywallaroopademelonrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat)
Among kangaroos, seahorses, and anteaters, only kangaroos have a pouch. Female kangaroos have a pouch where they carry and nurse their young after birth. Seahorses do not have pouches; instead, male seahorses carry fertilized eggs in a special brood pouch until they hatch. Anteaters also lack pouches, as they give birth to live young that cling to their mother's back.
Only the female kangaroo has a pouch, and this is because the male takes no part at all in rearing the young joey. Only the female is able to provide the developing joey with he nutrition it needs to survive. The female is the one that produces the baby and that feeds it with milk in the pouch.
Ferrets, unlike kangaroos, do NOT have a pouch..
Kangaroos, and most marsupials, carry their offspring in a pouch. The correct term for the pouch is marsupium.