There are no marsupial bats.
Marsupials keep there newborn in a pouch, bats do not.
No, bats are not marsupials, they are placentals, just like humans, whales, cats and cows.
A baby thylacine was called a joey. All marsupial young are called joeys.
An animal with a pouche is called a marsupial.
Not unless the bats feel threatened by the humans.
A mammal which is not a marsupial or a monotreme is called a placental mammal. There is no opposite to a marsupial. An animal is either a marsupial or it is not. Marsupial is the term given to any mammal of the order Marsupialia whose young are born in an immature state and continue development in the "marsupium" (or pouch).
A baby bilby is called a joey. The bilby is a marsupial, and all marsupial young are known as joeys.
Being a marsupial, a baby quoll is called a joey.
There is no creature called a "marsupial dragon". Anyone who tries to tell you otherwise is "having a go" at you (an Australian colloquialism for teasing).
Nope. As a species, they are doing pretty well.
This would apply to many marsupial species. An opossum is one. Potoroo: A rat Kangaroo.
The North American Opossum, commonly called a possum, is the only modern native marsupial in North America.
You're thinking of the platypus, which lays eggs and can eject venom. But the platypus isn't a marsupial. No marsupial lays eggs or is venomous. The platypus is part of a small group called the Monotremes.