they lived in woodlands and grasslands in south Australia and New South Wales
The desert rat-kangaroo does not live anywhere. It is now extinct. When still alive, this small marsupial, and member of the kangaroo family, was found only in the gibber plains and loamy flats of the Lake Eyre Basin of northeastern South Australia and far southwestern Queensland.
no
if there are they are in a zoo
No, they live together.
The kangaroo would not live in either freshwater or marine biomes. It also would not live in the tundra.
kangaroo
The tiniest species of kangaroo, the Musky Rat-kangaroo, lives in the rainforest of far North Queensland. Both Bennett's tree kangaroo and Lumholtz's tree kangaroo are also found in small sections of the northern Queensland rainforest. The Black wallaby can also be found in rainforests of Queensland, although their range also extends to the south.
No. Kangaroos do not and cannot live in the ocean.
The Ord's Kangaroo Rat is found in western North America. It is found around through the region of the Great Plains and the Great Basin, from the southern border of Canada down to central Mexico.
Most species of kangaroos do not live in the tropical rainforest, but in grasslands and open bushland of Australia. The exceptions are the various species of tree kangaroo, and the tiny musky rat-kangaroo.
some coyotes eat kangaroo rats. the kind that live in the desserts.