A Seahorse has a brood pouch, in which the female deposits the eggs.
There is a "marsupial bird" called a Sungrebe, found in South America. Immediately after the young chicks hatch, the male places them in pouches under his wings, and leaves the nest, presumably tending the chicks while keeping them under his wings.
The Emperor penguin incubates the female's egg in a brood pouch.
The extinct Thylacine of Australia, or Tasmanian Tiger, had a pouch, but not for the purpose of carrying the joeys - it was for protecting its male reproductive parts while it ran through dense underbrush.
Animals with pouches
No. Kinkajou are not marsupials, which are primarily the animals which have pouches. Kinkajou are placental mammals.
No: only the female has a pouch.
It is called a maripul. (Not sure if that's the right spelling) Marsupials. ^^
Animals with pouches are the marsupials and includes kangaroos, opossums, koalas, wombats, wallabies, Tasmanian devils, etc.
Guinea pigs don't have pouches. Sugar gliders and other animals do, guinea pigs are NOT one of them.
There are fluid pouches in Chitin to keep the animals from drying out.
Harry prebble and his family
I'm pretty sure only marsupials ( kangaroos , koalas , etc.) have pouches to carry their young.
the males of seahorses carry their young in their pouches, but they dont get pregnant
No. Male koalas do not have pouches. The pouch serves the purpose of protecting and nurturing the koala joey, which is completely helpless at birth, and must attach to a female's teat in order to receive the milk it needs. Male koalas have no part in raising the joey.
The correct spelling is testicle (one of the paired pouches holding the male testes).