A kangaroo's pocket is commonly called a pouch but the correct name is marsupium.
The pouch of a wallaby, kangaroo or other marsupial is known as the marsupium.
They are called "Female".
No. Marsupials have pouches. Marsupials include kangaroos, koalas, wallabies and so on.
Yes, female Wallabies have a pouch called the marsupium, just like most Marsupials. (male Wallabies do not have a pouch.)
Animals with pouches are the marsupials and includes kangaroos, opossums, koalas, wombats, wallabies, Tasmanian devils, etc.
Marsupials have baby pouches. Kangaroos, wallabies, possums, and some others.
Kangaroos and wallabies are both marsupials in the family macropodidae, meaning "long footed".
Yes. Young female kangaroos do have pouches. Males never develop a pouch.
Kangaroos carry their babies in special pouches on their bellies.
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.
No. Contrary to popular belief, kangaroos and wallabies cannot hybridise, despite both being macropods. Some people erroneously believe that wallaroos are a hybrid of kangaroos and wallabies, but they are not.
No: only the female has a pouch.
because they have pouches.
No, wallabies are marsupials like kangaroos and possums. Pachyderms are elephants.