Marsupials are mammals, so share all features with other mammals. As well, they are vertebrates, so share the characteristic of having a backbone with birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians. Like birds and reptiles, mammals breathe via lungs (rather than gills), and like birds, they are warm-blooded.
Wombats are Australian marsupials. Marsupials are a type of mammal.
Marsupials are animals like koalas, kangaroos, wallabies, wombats, Tasmanian devils, possums or any other type of animal that has a pouch where the young (joeys) continue their development after they are born. Some marsupials, such as numbats, do not have pouches.
Koalas do not resemble kangaroos. They are both marsupials, but they do not resemble each other in any other way, apart from shared characteristics of marsupials.
The koala is a marsupial and, like most (not all) other marsupials, it has a pouch.Other marsupials include:wombat (the koala's closest relative)kangaroopossumgliderTasmanian devilnumbat (a marsupial without a pouch)quoll
No. Marsupials are just one of three groups of mammals. The other two are monotremes and placental mammals. The vast majority of modern mammals are placental.
Lions,Wolves and sometimes dingos
The charateristics that differentiate families from other social groups are law, education, lifestyle.
All placental animals are mammals. Placental mammals are the most successful of the major mammal groups (the other two being the marsupials and the monotremes). Everything from rodents to dogs to cows and even elephants, even you, are placental mammals. In fact, they are found on every continent and in virtually every habitat on Earth.
from other animals they get it
No, i do not beileve so.
puss
Mammals have three special characteristics that separate them from other groups of animals. The females produce milk by mammary glands, they have hair, and they have 3 specific middle ear bones. All of these characteristics are true of elephants, thus they are mammals (in the Order Proboscidea).