The American opossum belongs to this family.
An opossum is a small terrestrial omnivorous marsupial. It is in the order Didelphimorphia and the family Didelphidae.
Didelphidae.
Didelphidae.
The Didelphidae, or being less specific, marsupials.
The Water Opossum (Chironectes minimus), also locally known as the Yapok, is a marsupial of the family Didelphidae. It looks like mostly related with this family is the Originally native to the eastern United States, the Virginia Opossum which was intentionally introduced into the West during the Great depressoin probably as a source of food.
True possums - those that are found in Australia and nearby islands - are divided into three families. These families are: the ringtail possums and gliders (Family Petauridae); the brushtail possums and cuscuses (Family Phalangeridae) and the pygmy possums and feathertail glider (Family Burramyidae).
The Tasmanian Devil is a marsupial. Specifically, it is a Dasyurid or carnivorous marsupial, so it is in the family Dasyuridae.
Yes. The potoroo is a marsupial, and one of the smaller members of the kangaroo family.
No. They belong to the leporidae family.
That they are stressed by disease, famine or homelessness is the meaning of opossums coming out in the daylight.Specifically, the marsupial mammal in question (Didelphidae family) can be grouped among the world's night-foraging animals. They go against that lifestyle when they experience environmental stress. Among the biggest challenges will be infection with the rabies virus, loss of food sources, and threats to shelters.
No. The bilby is quite small. The largest marsupial is the red kangaroo.
Only the koala, an Australian marsupial, is in the family Phascolarctidae.