Marsupials do give birth to immature live young that continue to develop within the mother's pouch. After it climbs up the mother's belly and gets in the pouch it grabs on to one of the teats. After several weeks, the young marsupial starts coming out more and more. It leaves the pouch when it is about 7 to 10 months old.
Yes. Marsupials are mammals, and the defining characteristic of mammals is that they feed their young on mothers' milk.
The simple answer is "no". Penguins are birds, not marsupials. They do not have pouches.
Well they are marsupials, so I would assume so.
They are mammals, but they are not bears.Koalas are marsupials, and not even remotely related to bears. Marsupials are an infraclass of mammals, and like all mammals, they feed their young on mothers' milk.
yes but they are marsupials so their babys are very small and thet grow in their mothers pouch
Monotremes and marsupials are both mammals. They are warm-blooded vertebrates which have fur and breathe using lungs (instead of gills). As they are mammals, they both feed their young on mothers' milk.
Yes. The fact that these animals feed their young on mothers' milk is one of the defining characteristics of all mammals, including the placentals, marsupials and monotremes.
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.
a baby
Yes. All mammals, including marsupials, have the following characteristics:a body covering of fur, skin or hairsuckle the young on mothers' milkwarm-blooded vertebrates which breathe through lungswith the exception of platypuses and echidnas which are monotremes, or egg laying mammals, all other mammals including marsupials give birth to live young
The young baby kangaroo (joey) is born in a very immature state, but moves into the mother's pouch and attaches to a nipple to continue it's development. A human baby is born in a more mature state.
Many marsupials feed their young a range of supplementary foods like leaves, fruits, insects, or even meat in addition to milk. This diet helps the young develop and grow as they transition to more solid foods.