Yes, just like many other animals, there can be kangaroos which grow white fur.
On occasion, there are even albino kangaroos. This occurs genetically when an animal has no pigment in it's cells, causing the skin and fur to be completely white and the irises in the eye to be red. Albino animals don't survive very long in the wild because their lack or coloring and camoflage makes then very easy targets for predators.
There is no species of kangaroo that is white. However, as with all mammals, there can be albino specimens.
There are no such things as white kangaroos or kabgaroos.
No, kangaroos is a common, concrete noun, the plural form of the singular kangaroo. A collective noun is a word for a group of things; the collective nouns for kangaroos are a troop of kangaroos or a mob of kangaroos.
kangaroos <3
Frogs,rabbits,kangaroos,people,jackrabbits
If this is a reference to the Australian Christmas song, they are known as "Six white boomers".
There is no specific species known as a "white kangaroo". While white kangaroos do exist, they are rare, and a result of albinism. these albino kangaroos are simply known by the species name to which the belong. If a Red kangaroo produces a white joey, the joey is still Macropus Rufus, for example.
If the term refers to people who ride kangaroos, the answer is no.
Things that leap include frogs, rabbits, kangaroos, people, and salmon
In Australia, Santa (or Father Christmas) is assisted by six white boomers, which are large, male kangaroos.
Kangaroos are born as kangaroos.
alot of people know things about kangaroos like there is 10 different species of them and they carry their cub around for a few months so they dont die so there is a few things humans know about kangaroos
- ugg boots -kangaroos or koalas -Steve Irwin