Koalas do not store food. Australian animals do not need to store food, as the food remains plentiful through all seasons. When drought seasons come, or when habitat is lost, many animals move on, or they starve.
Kangaroos do not store food.
There seems to be a misconception that kangaroos store food in either their tail or their pouch. Neither one is the case.
A pouch is a safe place for a baby to grow. There,it feeds on her milk and carries on growing. They carry them in their pouch until they are big or old enough to survive on their own.
Yes. Young female kangaroos do have pouches. Males never develop a pouch.
because they have pouches.
Yes. All female kangaroos have a pouch.
No. Marsupials have pouches. Marsupials include kangaroos, koalas, wallabies and so on.
No. People are not kangaroos by any means. They do not have pouches.
of course! they keep them in their pouches.
Koalas and kangaroos are both mammals with pouches in which they rear their young. They are marsupials, and almost all species of marsupials have a pouch for this purpose.
There are no disadvantages of pouches for kangaroos. The pouch is a unique and versatile adaptation that equips the kangaroo to care for its young in Australia's uncertain and sometimes harsh environment.
Kangaroos carry their babies in special pouches on their bellies.
Given that female kangaroos of reproductive age are in an almost perpetual state of pregnancy, the answer is "yes".
I'm pretty sure only marsupials ( kangaroos , koalas , etc.) have pouches to carry their young.
Marsupials have baby pouches. Kangaroos, wallabies, possums, and some others.