The wombat is a marsupial of the family Vombatidae.
Animals of this family are characterised by having short, stocky legs; short, almost non-existent tails; large heads; and small ears.
The wombat belongs to the family Vombatidae. It is a mammal and a marsupial. Members of the family Vombatidae are characterised by having short, stocky legs; short, almost non-existent tails; large heads; and small ears. Only the Common wombat, the Southern hairy nosed wombat and the Northern hairy nosed wombat are in this family.
Wombats belong to the Order Diprotodontia.This is the same order that koalas, Australian possums, kangaroos and wallabies all belong to.
Yes, yes it is. A wombat is an Australian mammal.
No. Wombats and numbats are both marsupials, but they do not belong to the same marsupial order or family. The wombat's order is Diprotodontia and its family is Vombatidae. The numbat is classified in its own family, and has no close relatives. Its order is Dasyuomorphia and its family is Myrmecobiidae.
The wombat is a mammal. Specifically, it is a marsupial.
The hairy-nosed wombat (not the common wombat) is the official emblem of South Australia.
Yes it is.
Wombat
no, wombats are native to Australia
Yes, that is correct
It is in the kingdom of Animalia.
Yes; a corella is a type of Australian parrot.
No. No native Australian marsupials migrate.