No. The two animals are completely different. Sugar gliders are marsupials, and squirrels are placental mammals. It is impossible to crossbreed these two species.
Chinchillas are larger, furry mammals in Order Rodentia. As such, they have rodent-like qualities.Hedgehogs are smaller, quill-covered mammals in the Order Erinaceomorpha.Both animals have differing lives, nutritional needs, behaviors, etc
The squirrel glider (not to be confused with the sugar glider) is currently listed as Lower Risk (near threatened).
i believe that you are thinking of a sugar glider which is also known as a flying squirrel
Sugar Gliders are Marsupials and are a member of the Petauridae family; there are 11 species that belong to this family. The members of this family consist of possums which are the closest relatives of the sugar gliders except for perhaps other types of gliders. The most immediate relatives are the five other gliders, also native to Australia. These include the Lesser glider, Greater glider, Squirrel glider, Mahogany glider (endangered) and Feathertail glider.
The Sugar Glider is not a crossbreed; nor is it possible to cross it with any other animal. It is a marsupial which is native to Australia, although it is now also common throughout southeast Asia.
There are no other names for sugar gliders. There are, however, five other varieties of glider which are related to sugar gliders. These include the Feathertail glider, Mahogany glider, Greater glider, Yellow-bellied glider and Squirrel glider. People have made up names for sugar gliders such as "sugar babies" and "honey gliders", but these and other similar names are not legitimate names for sugar gliders.
well a sugar glider is a type of flting squirrel but not just a name. it is another squirrel too.
Skunk, squirrel, shrew, sea otter, seal, sloth sugar glider.
Absolutely not. They may eat insects and even, occasionally, tiny mammals and reptiles, but never sugar gliders.
蜜袋鼯 (mi4 dai4 wu2)literally: "honey pocket squirrel"
The sugar glider is a marsupial
Sugar gliders and other gliders (small marsupials of Australia) do not fly. The only mammal capable of free flight is the bat.Gliders glide by means of skin membranes. They have a membrane of skin which stretches from their wrists to their ankles, which enables them to glide between treetops. They do not fly but, depending upon the species are capable of gliding between 50m and 80m. They must always launch out from higher points such as treetops or power poles.