Marsupials have pouches to carry their young. No other animal besides marsupials have pouches.
Correction:
It is not the pouch that makes marsupials unique. This is a common but erroneous belief. Not all marsupials have pouches, and some other creatures, such as echidnas, do carry their young in a pouch.
What makes the marsupial different is the fact that the young are all born extremely undeveloped, after a short gestation period. Most species then nurture their joeys in a pouch, but the joeys of those that do not have a pouch cling to the mother's underbelly, secured by the mother's teat which has swollen in the joey's mouth.
In addition, female marsupials have two vaginas, or what are called paired lateral vaginae. These are for the purpose of transporting the sperm to the womb, but there is a midline pseudovaginal canal for actually giving birth. As well as two vaginas and two uteruses, female marsupials have two fallopian tubes and two cervixes.
There is no such thing. Mammals are one classification, and birds are another. All birds lay eggs. The platypus and the echidna are the only egg-laying mammals.
No. like all mammals, they are endothermic(warm blooded).
No. All echidnas are mammals, and all mammals are vertebrates. Echidnas are different from "echinoderms".
Yes, Bree. This is one of the weirdest animals, I think. Even though they are mammals, they do lay eggs, which is so bizarre imho. :) Mammals are a class of animals that all have mammary glands (boobies). ;) The next division down is order. Platypus are one of only 5 remaining species of the order, Monotremata, all of which lay eggs. No other mammals exist that lay eggs.
I'm not sure if they do but a giraffe and a human both have seven so I'm guessing they do.
Yes. Koalas are true mammals. Like other mammals, koalas give birth to live young, they feed their young with milk, and they are warmblooded, all defining features of Mammals.Koalas, specifically, are an order of mammals known as marsupialia, or marsupials. They are mammals in every sense of the word, but they also have a pouch in which most of the development of the young joey occurs.
Koalas are mammals. Specifically, they are an order of mammals known as marsupialia, or marsupials. They are mammals in every sense of the word, but they also have a pouch in which most of the development of the young joey occurs.Like all mammals except for the monotremes (platypuses and echidnas), koalas give birth to live young.Placental mammals and marsupials have certain defining characteristics that distinguish them from other types of animals such as reptiles; these include hair, live birth (as compared to laying eggs - only mammals which are monotremes reproduce by laying eggs) and the feeding of milk to offspring by the mother; koalas have these characteristics.
Yes. Like other mammals, koalas give birth to live young, they feed their young with milk, and they are warmblooded, all defining features of Mammals.Koalas, specifically, are an order of mammals known as marsupialia, or marsupials. They are mammals in every sense of the word, but they also have a pouch in which most of the development of the young joey occurs.
Mammals have internal breeding and have sexual intercourse in order to fertalize the eggs. Other animals have external breeding where the female lays the eggs and then the male fertilizes it. In simpler terms, Mammals have sex, and other animals don't.
Humans are very unique among all the numerous mammals. So far, we have evolved and adapted the most. Hope this helped! :)
Yes, by definition cetaceans are an order of mammals.
Both. Humans are animals in the order Mammalia. All mammals are animals, but not all animals are mammals.
they have the thickest coat of all mammals
kangaroos and wallaby's belong to the same family. They belong to macopodibe meaning big footed. the wombat belongs to vombatidae and are usually characterized as having short stocky legs, almost a non-exsisting tail, large head and, small legs.
All mammals feed their young with milk, have hair, have a neocortex region of the brain, and have three middle ear bones. There are other characteristics shared by all mammals, but the above four are (for the most part) that only ones unique to mammals.
No. Koalas are marsupials, a whole separate class of mammals from the placental bears. Although often referred to by people outside of Australians as "koala bears", this is a misnomer. Koalas are not related to bears at all.
The kangaroo belongs to the order Diprotodontia, meaning "two front teeth". Many other marsupials also belong to this order, including wallabies, wallaroos, koalas, possums, sugar gliders and wombats. The kangaroo is also a marsupial, but this is not its order. "Marsupialia" was originally the order, but it is now regarded as the "infraclass".