a mammal where the young is born very early in development and is reared in the mother's pouch containing the mammae
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a mammal of the order Marsupialia comprised of opossums, kangaroos, wombats and bandicoots having a pouch containing the mammary glands and serving as a receptacle for the young.
A type of mammal with a pouch for its young.
a mammal of which the female carries her young in an external pouch.
mammals of which the females have a pouch (the marsupium) containing the teats where the young are fed and carried
a mammal that has a pouch where it carries its young
a mammal which carries its young in a pouch after a short time in the uterus
a mammal which has a pouch
an animal that has a pouch to hold its babies
an animal whose young develop in pouches
an mammal that has a pouch for its young to grow in
A mammal, such as kangaroo or opossum, whose young complete their embryonic development inside a maternal pouch called a marsupium.
A mammal that gives birth to under-developed young and rears them in a pouch
A mammal whose distinguishing features include the birth of young at an early foetal stage of development, and generally, a pouch (marsupium) in which further development of the foetus occurs.
a primitive mammal that gives pre-mature birth to its young and then nurses it in a pouch i.e. kangaroos, opossums are marsupials
koala, kangaroo, or other animal with a pouch for carrying its young
A mammal that has a pouch for its babies to grow in, for example the possum and kangaroo.
A member of a group of mammals 1) that generally do not have a placenta and 2) whose females generally have a pouch on the abdomen containing the nipples, where newborn young are carried. Marsupials include bandicoots, kangaroos, opossums, wombats and others.
n. (adj.) A mammal whose young are born while still embryos, and must crawl into its mother's external pouch (called the marsupium) to finish development.
Marsupials are mammals in which the female typically has a pouch (called the marsupium, from which the name 'Marsupial' derives) in which it rears its young through early infancy. They differ from placental mammals (Placentalia) in their reproductive traits. The female has two vaginas, both of which open externally through one orifice but lead to different compartments within the uterus.