No. There are three types of mammals: monotremes, marsupials, and placental mammals. Monotremes lay eggs, marsupials give live birth to very undeveloped young, which must attach to the nipple (possibly in a pouch), and placental mammals give live birth to much more developed young. A polar bear is a placental mammal.
A koala, which has no relation at all to the bear family, is a marsupial, that is, a pouched mammal.
This is the Koala, often incorrectly referred to as a "koala bear". It is a marsupial, not a bear. Bears are placental mammals.
No. It is a marsupial (not a bear).
No: the Tasmanian devil is not a bear. It is a marsupial.
A koala isn't a bear at all, actually. It is a marsupial, whereas a bear is a placental mammal. "Koala bear" is just a nickname given to the marsupial by non-Australians.
Not at all. A koala isn't a bear, but a marsupial, whereas a bear is a placental mammal. "Koala bear" is just a nickname given to the marsupial by non-Australians.
The grizzly or brown bear and the polar bear are basicly the same size.
why does the polar bear helps the polar ice
They are a marsupial while a bear is a placental. Koala bear is just a nickname for it.
The Polar Bear.
The Polar bear is the biggest bear.
A koala is a marsupial, not a bear, which is a placental mammal.