Pademelons are small members of the kangaroo family. The word 'legal' does not apply to them, unless the question is being asked about whether they may be kept as pets. Pademelons may not be kept as pets anywhere in the world - not even Australia.
No. Pademelons are gentle and defenceless creatures.
Pademelons do not make nests. They sleep within thickets of vegetation, or hiding under scrubby bushes.
No.
No. Pademelons live in dense bushland - preferably wet sclerophyll - or rainforest. This habitat provides plenty of cover for them.
Pademelons do not lay eggs. They are marsupials, and no marsupials lay eggs. The only egg-laying mammals are the monotremes, which include just platypuses and echidnas.
No. Pademelons are small types of kangaroos so, like all kangaroos, they are found only in Australia, or on the island of New Guinea, or on some of the smaller nearby Indonesian islands such as the Aru Islands.
Kangaroo
No. All pademelons are herbivores. They are smallish members of the kangaroo family.
Pademelons are smaller members of the kangaroo family. They move primarily by hopping on two legs.
Pademelons, small members of the kangaroo family, eat short green grasses, broad-leafed herbs (forbs), both fresh and fallen leaves, fruits such as figs and berries, fungi and green shoots.They also occasionally eat mosses, and even some types of insects, such as cicadas.
Yes. Kangaroos, tree kangaroos, wallabies, wallaroos, potoroos and pademelons are all part of the kangaroo family.
The common name for macropus is kangaroo. This includes all species of kangaroo which, in turn compirises wallabies, wallaroos, pademelons and so on.