Yes, the dunnart has a pouch. Most, not all, marsupials do have a pouch.
Typically, dunnart joeys remain in the pouch for around eight weeks.
No. Dunnarts only eat invertebrates.
No. Dunnarts are marsupials, so they give birth to live young.
It is mainly bats and owls.
Most marsupials have pouches, although some have just a flap of skin. Pouched marsupials include:kangaroowallaroowallabyTasmanian devilkoalapossumglidersome species of opossumpademelonwombatcuscusquokkaquollbettongtuan / phascogaleplanigalebandicootbilbydunnart
A baby dunnart, like many marsupial young, is called a "joey".
The Long-tailed Dunnart (Sminthopsis longicaudata) has a life cycle that begins with the female giving birth to small, underdeveloped young after a gestation period of about 11 days. The tiny joeys crawl into their mother's pouch, where they continue to develop for approximately 40 days. After leaving the pouch, the young dunnarts remain in the nest and are weaned around 60 days old. They reach sexual maturity at about 8-10 months, allowing for reproduction to continue in the following breeding season.
Most marsupials have pouches. The pouched marsupials which are Australian animals include:kangaroowombatkoalapossumgliderTasmanian devilbandicootbilbypotorooquokkawallabywallaroopademelonphascogalequollrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat)dunnartplanigalekultarrningauiwoylie
The pouch is also called the "brood pouch".
No he does not have a pouch
How big is the pouch
gular pouch