Wallabies are smaller members of the kangaroo family. Any member of the kangaroo family, or macropods, is related to the wallaby, and thus looks like the wallaby. These related species include Red Kangaroos, Grey Kangaroos, Pademelons, Bettongs, Quokkas and Euros (Wallaroos), to name a few.
A marsupial has a pouch on the front of the body where immature young form.
EXAMPLES:
They are koalas, kangeroos, koalas and the like.
No marsupial smells like popcorn.
By the term "marsupial-like," I assume you are asking for a mammal that is like a marsupial but is not one. Colugos, which are placental mammals, are marsupial-like in that after a short gestation period (about 60 days), they give birth to rather undeveloped young which then cling to the mother's belly. The mother even makes a pouch by folding up her patagia (gliding membranes connecting the wrists and ankles) and her tail into one.
It is black, but its ventral fur and throat are off-white.
No they are not primates even though they might look like it and if you think about it, they do kinda sound like it. But they do not have aposeable thumbs. Thus, sloths are not primates and are not related to monkeys either...
The marsupial is an "antechinus", which is a small pouched animal like a mouse or shrew.
The marsupial mole digs through the sand with its big shovel-like claws.
AN AUSTRAILIAN HEDGEHOG-LIKE MARSUPIAL
Marsupial has 4 syllables, split into syllables like this: Mar-su-pi-al
No. It is a mammal, like a marsupial is, but it lacks the pouch of a marsupial, and its young are born more fully developed. The Llama is also South American cud chewing mammal and is related to the camel.
Rottnest Island, off the coast of Western Australia, is known for the quokka, a small wallaby-like marsupial.
yes an opposum is a mammal if you really wanted to know, an oppossum is a marsupial, which is a type of mammal. (marsupial: just like a kangaroo or koala)
This is the Koala, often incorrectly referred to as a "koala bear". It is a marsupial, not a bear. Bears are placental mammals.