They sure do! The kangaroo babies are born in the normal way, then holding tightly to their mommy's hair, they crawl up the mommy's tummy until they find the pocket. The pocket is called a'Pouch'. When the babies get into the pouch, they quickly find the mommy's milk and then they drink milk whenever they are hungry. The babies grow and grow so that after awhile, the babies get to be so big that the mommy makes them get out of the pouch and live outside.
the male seahorse gives birth instead of the female :D the female gives birth but the male carries the baby seahorses in a pouch at the front like a kangaroo XD
A male is a buck, and a baby is a joey.
Only the female kangaroo has a pouch, and this is because the male takes no part at all in rearing the young joey. Only the female is able to provide the developing joey with he nutrition it needs to survive. The female is the one that produces the baby and that feeds it with milk in the pouch.
Seahorses are one of the few animal species where the male carries the baby. The male seahorse has a pouch where the female deposits her eggs, which he then fertilizes and carries until they hatch.
male
In a pouch in front of them, on their stomach.
No, only the female. The pouch is where the tiny young kangaroo crawls to develop further, attached to a teat. Only female kangaroos have pouches just as only female mammals have a uterus. The sole purpose of the pouch is to give the underdeveloped baby a safe place to grow and feed until it is old enough to live independently of its mother.
The female seahorse transfers her eggs to the male which he self-fertilises in his pouch.
No, but they have a sort of pouch where they carry their young.
It's the female who make the eggs, but she deposits them in a pouch on the male seahorse's stomach for him to carry while the egs develop. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out to start their own lives.
Neither. The baby kangaroo, or joey, emerges from the birth canal, much as any mammal young does, but it is completely blind and hairless. Moving by instinct only, it crawls up the mother's fur to the pouch, where it attaches to a teat. The teat then swells in the joey's mouth, securing it through all the mother's movement so it cannot be dislodged, until it has grown for several weeks.
It is the female giraffe, as a mammal, that carries the developing baby and gives birth.As the category is seahorse, it is the male seahorse that carries the eggs in a special pouch until hatching and grow big enough to exit the male's pouch and be independent.