because non came from other contreies
Wild cats are found on all continents except Antarctica and Australia. However, Australia does have some cat-like marsupials.
According to classical continental drift theory, the world originally had only one continent, Pangaea, which separated into Laurasia and Gondawana. Marsupials probably originated in modern-day China, which was then in eastern Laurasia. They circled around the globe. They went west through Eurasia to North America (which was then western Pangaea). North America was connected to South America and they went south into South America. Many remain there today. However, the Americas then split and they could not return to North America. South America was connected to Antarctica, and Antarctica was only slightly separated from Australia. Some marsupials stayed in South America, and some traveled to Australia through Antarctica. (Those that stayed in Antarctica went extinct when Antarctica traveled south into freezing areas.) Throughout this whole process, however, marsupials never crossed through Africa.
There are no bears in Antarctica (polar bears live in the Arctic), and their are no true bears in Australia (Koala Bears are marsupials, and not really bears at all).
mega marsupials are dead and marsupials arent
No. Beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals.
There is no problem with marsupials.
Marsupials have fur.
No. Rabbits are not marsupials.
They live in every continent except for Antartica.
Yes: quolls are marsupials. They are dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials, feeding on birds and smaller mammals.
no they are not marsupials, and they are not related to pandas which are bears
Bilbies are marsupials. Rabbits are not.