Marsupials have fur.
All marsupials have fur or hair.
Marsupials actually are mammals. They have hair and feed their babies milk.
No. Marsupials are mammals, so they have fur or hair. Only birds have feathers.
Monotremes and marsupials are both orders within the classification of marsupials.Because monotremes and marsupials are mammals, they are warm-blooded vertebrates with skin, fur or hair, and breathe using lungs.Monotremes and marsupials, along with placental mammals, feed their young on mothers' milk.Monotremes and marsupials are both found primarily (but not exclusively) on the Australian continent.
No. Marsupials are vertebrates, i.e. they have a backbone. Squid are invertebrates (no backbone). Marsupials have pouches. Squid do not. They release eggs into the water. Marsupials obtain oxygen by breathing, using lungs. Squid obtain oxygen through a pair of long 'gills' covered in leaflets called lamellae. Marsupials have fur, hair or skin. Squid do not. A kangaroo (for example) is a type of marsupial.
Yes. Mulgara are small marsupials of Australia, and therefore mammals. They are commonly grouped with a number of other carnivorous marsupials as "marsupial mice", and in many ways they do resemble mice, being small with brownish fur.
mega marsupials are dead and marsupials arent
No. Beavers are placental mammals, not marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals.
There is no problem with marsupials.
No. Rabbits are not marsupials.
All mammals including the sub groups marsupials and monotremes.
Yes: quolls are marsupials. They are dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials, feeding on birds and smaller mammals.