marsupial
Marsupial
All marsupial young are known as joeys. Almost all marsupials carry their young in a pouch (the numbat, for example, does not have a pouch).
An animal like the opossum and kangaroo that carry their young in a pouch after birth, is called a marsupial. (marr-SOOP-ee-uhl)
A hamster is not an animal that has a pouch. It carries its young in its uterus until birth.
NO. a marsupial carries it young in a pouch.
Pelican (was thought to feed her young of her own flesh)Wolf (one raised Romulus and Remus, another raised Mowgli)Opossum (carries her young on her back)Kangaroo (carries her young in a pouch)Crocodile (carries her young in her mouth)
A kangaroo is an example of a mammal that carries their young in a pouch. The joey, or baby kangaroo, develops inside the mother's pouch after being born extremely premature.
The animal found in Australia that carries its baby in a stomach pouch, similar to the kangaroo, is the koala. Koalas are marsupials known for their tree-dwelling lifestyle and diet consisting mainly of eucalyptus leaves. Like kangaroos, female koalas have a pouch where they carry and nurture their young, called joeys, until they are mature enough to venture out.
All members of the kangaroo family move with a hopping motion, and the female carries her joey in a pouch. They include:kangaroopotorooquokkawallabywallaroopademelonrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat)
A Kangaroo.
If you mean pouch the answer is a mammal
Monkeys and Gorillas mainly. Certain marsupials continue to carry their young on their back for several months, once the joeys have emerged permanently from the pouch. These are mainly the arboreal marsupials. Possums, koalas, quolls and cuscuses exhibit this behaviour.