A Kangaroo.
A panda is a marsupial which means the young develop in a pouch. They are known as pouch animals because the adult female have a pouch on the outside of the body where the young grow up and keeps the baby warm and safe.
Marsupials are animals which carry their young inside a pouch. Most known are the Kangaroo and Wombat. Marsupials are most prevalent in the Southern Hemisphere, particularly Australia and South America. The only common marsupial known to be in the Northern Hemisphere is the opossum.
A kangaroo
A young quokka will first leave the pouch once it is between 175 and 195 days old. It will not leave permanently until three to four months later. Quokkas have embryonic diapause, which means that one day after a baby is delivered and enters the pouch, the female mates again. The young in the pouch develops, but the young that (hypothetically) resulted from the second mating stalls its development after just a few days. If the young in the pouch dies before it is around 150 days old, the second young resumes its development, is delivered 24-27 days later, and enters the pouch. If not, the second young will wait until the next breeding season to resume its development.
The echidna keeps its young in a chamber within a burrow that it digs. However, the egg is actually laid and incubated in a temporary pouch - more a flap of skin - that develops only during the breeding season.
When first born, the young joey latches onto a teat. This teat then swells in its mouth, and this sevures the joey firmly in the pouch, whether the animal has a top-opening pouch (like a kangaroo) or a backward-facing pouch (like a wombat or koala).
As a marsupial, kangaroos keep their young in a pouch.
The pouch is purely for the purpose of carrying the young joey.
The animal found in Australia that carries its baby in a stomach pouch, similar to the kangaroo, is the koala. Koalas are marsupials known for their tree-dwelling lifestyle and diet consisting mainly of eucalyptus leaves. Like kangaroos, female koalas have a pouch where they carry and nurture their young, called joeys, until they are mature enough to venture out.
All members of the kangaroo family move with a hopping motion, and the female carries her joey in a pouch. They include:kangaroopotorooquokkawallabywallaroopademelonrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat)
No. Lemurs are not marsupials, but placental mammals.
Young koalas, or joeys, do most of their development in the mother's pouch.