No, they belong in different families and superfamilies but same caniform infraorder, the infraorder they both belong to is mustelida, skunks are part of the family Mephitidae which belongs to the superfamily Procyonoidea whilst honey badgers are part of the family Melidae which belongs to the superfamily Musteloidea.
Skunks belong to a different family than honey badgers. They both belong to the same superfamily, though, which is Musteloidea. So they are not super closely related, but they are somewhat related.
Badger
A skunk!!! :) :P XP I know it from Meet Addy
Badger or beaver, find something that has similar features then look it up
I was watching a show and it said that there is NO such animal that is related to the skunk. I was watching a show and it said that there is NO such animal that is related to the skunk. I was watching a show and it said that there is NO such animal that is related to the skunk.
honey badger of course
the relashionship between a honey guide and honey badger is, when a honey guide smells honey he sings a little tune and waits for a honey badger to come. when the honey badger reaches the honey guide the bird flies to were the scent of honey came from leading the badger towards honey.
really they are in Africa, the honey guide bird guides the badger to the honey and then the badger breaks it and the badger and the honey guide bird eats it.they are a great team when they searches honey.................................................................. lol=laugh out loud
It was a badger.
Fun fact: Honey badgers can fend off lions, but they can't do the same with cheetahs, even though a lion would destroy a cheetah!
Honey badger dont care. Honey badger consumes whatever he wants.
A honey badger would likely win in a confrontation with a koala due to its aggressive nature, powerful claws, and thick skin. Honey badgers are fierce fighters and have been known to take on much larger predators.