Remove the apostrophe.
Marsupials are mammals that carry their babies in stomach pouches.
Incidentally, not all marsupials are pouched. For some species, the "pouch" is nothing more than a flap of skin.
The fingerlike pouches in which fish food is processed are called "stomach pouches" or "gastric pouches." These structures are part of the digestive system that help in breaking down food. In some contexts, they may also refer to "pharyngeal pouches" in certain species, which assist in the processing of food before it enters the stomach.
Gastric Bypass pouches are different than a stomach for many reasons. A gastric bypass pouch helps a person stop eating by limiting the amount of food someone can physically consume.
Pouches in the neck usually cause bad breath (halitosis) and the regurgitation of swallowed food and saliva. Some patients with Zenker's diverticula can push on their neck and make old food appear in their mouths. Pouches near the stomach.
Ruminantsare animals that have a 4 chambered stomach, meaning they have one stomach with four divisions. Ruminants include some large animals that chew grass or leaves, such as cows and sheep.It is sometimes believed that almost any animal that chews grass or leaves is a ruminant with four stomachs but this is certainly not the case. Herbivorous marsupials are not ruminants; nor are rabbits and hares, or camels, llamas and alpacas, for example.
Marsupials which have an abdominal pouch include:kangaroowallaroowallabyTasmanian devilkoalapossumglidersome species of opossumpademelonwombatcuscusquokkaquollbettongtuan / phascogaleplanigalebandicootbilbydunnart
Four semicircular pouches that open from the sides of the stomach and are the sites of extracellular digestion
Esophageal pouches, also known as esophageal diverticula, are pocket-like structures formed when the interior space of the esophagus, the tube that connects the mouth to the stomach, protrudes into the walls that surround it.
Most animals' stomachs are called a stomach
The bilbie's pouch is positioned low down on its abdomen, and it opens backwards so that dirt does not get in when the bilby digs.
Yes any animals' stomach is an organ.
There are actually many animals that have four stomachs; two of the commonly known ones in the United States are cattle and bison.
in there stomach