Well A. people are hunting them for food. and B. Is because they want the wallabies hide.
Rock wallabies do not spend all their time out on rock ledges. They are so called because they frequent rocky slopes and hillsides, and are built for this terrain, rather than flat terrain. Rock wallabies feed and shelter in bushland and scrub.
No. Contrary to popular belief, kangaroos and wallabies cannot hybridise, despite both being macropods. Some people erroneously believe that wallaroos are a hybrid of kangaroos and wallabies, but they are not.
Wallabies have colouring that enables them to camouflage naturally within their habitat. Whether they are rock wallabies, swamp wallabies or brush wallabies, they tend to blend in with their environment.
No. However, cases of cruelty by idiotic individuals against harmless wallabies have been noted. Wallabies are native animals which are protected by law, and they may not be hunted or killed. Unlike kangaroos, they are not farmed for their meat.
Wallabies do not talk.
Wallabies are not pets. It is illegal to keep wallabies and kangaroos as pets anywhere in the world - but very few people are aware of this.
Wallabies eat grass, herbs, leaves, fruit and plants. Wallabies are herbivores.
Like most native Australian animals, wallabies try to avoid humans. They scatter at the approach of people, and are quite shy, especially the rock-wallaby varieties.
Wallabies do not live in the desert.
No. There are lots of wallabies still in existence.
Wallabies