Yes. They are placental mammals, all of which give birth to live young. Kangaroo rats are not the same as rat kangaroos, which are Australian marsupials (and also give birth to live young).
A marsupial is an animal that has a pouch. A kangaroo has a pouch so it is considered a marsupial. A kangaroo uses the pouch to carry their young after they give birth.
No. A kangaroo is a marsupial, meaning it gives birth to live young which then develop in an external pouch. Monotremes are egg-laying mammals. Only platypuses and echidnas are monotremes.
Baby lions, cows and elephants are fully developed and mostly fully functional immediately after birth. A kangaroo is at birth little more than a tiny embryo that can only crawl from the mother's womb into her pouch to develop there further.
Baby lions, cows and elephants are fully developed and mostly fully functional immediately after birth. A kangaroo is at birth little more than a tiny embryo that can only crawl from the mother's womb into her pouch to develop there further.
Tigers are viviparous; they are mammals that give birth to live young that have matured within the mother's body.
An animal like the opossum and kangaroo that carry their young in a pouch after birth, is called a marsupial. (marr-SOOP-ee-uhl)
No. Baby kangaroos and the young of all marsupials are called joeys. Young goats are called kids,
Mammals like : cats, tiger, lioness, zebra, kangaroo and Dogs
Koalas have live births. They give birth like other animals but as they are marsupials their young are extremely small (bean-sized) so they grow up in the mother's pouch the same way a Kangaroo rears her young.
yes, because they have birth to live young and feed them milk that is produced from their body.
Kangaroos give birth to live young, as they are marsupials. The only egg-laying mammals are the platypus and the echidna.