Female joey kangaroos stay with their mob as they grow up, or they may join a new mob. There can only be one dominant male in the mob, so young male joeys have to either be prepared to fight for dominance, or leave the mob to establish their own mob.
When they are born they are the size of a bean, but they crawl up and into the mother kangaroo's pouch where they latch onto a teat and suckle milk. They grow there till they are big enough to survive by themselves. When they are big enough to come out and eat grass they will always hop back into the pouch for a sleep, or if the mob is moving.
You grow your mob very large like! Then you hook them up with the biggest baddest gangstermobiles and gangsta weapons then you murder them. Word. You grow your mob very large like! Then you hook them up with the biggest baddest gangstermobiles and gangsta weapons then you murder them. Word.
No. Kangaroo joeys only live in the mother's pouch for up to eight months, and will continue to suckle from the mother for up to one year.
Most do, some stay boys forever.
YES! they grow up about anything!!! they will especially grow if you have some type of trellis or netting up against the house. up beware, once they are there they are there to stay! no removing!!
yes your bodies grow if you are a girl you grow up until you are 17 and if you are a boy you grow up until 22 and when you get old you might get short or you might stay your size.
You can make friends in the game iMobsters by building up your mob. To build up your mob, you can add them to your mob clan by adding their code that they've posted on your wall or you can give them your mob code.
For the animals most commonly recognised as kangaroos (e.g. Red kangaroos and Grey kangaroos), the average age when the joeys come out of their mother's pouch is about 7 months. They may continue to suckle for several months longer, but are no longer dependent on the mother.
Denise
The Tasmanian devil is a marsupial so, like most (not all) marsupials, it has a pouch to protect its joeys while they are developing. Joeys are generally born during April, which is mid-Autumn in Australia. The young joeys are born extremely undeveloped and must compete for a teat in the pouch. Tasmanian devils can actually give birth to up to 20 joeys at a time, but having only four teats, this means most of the young die. The Tasmanian devil joeys stay in the backward-facing pouch for around four months. The pouch faces backwards so that, when the mother digs, dirt does not get into the pouch. After four months, when they are fully furred, the joeys are transferred to a den. Within another three mobs or so, they start exploring outside. By the time they are forty weeks old, during January, the joeys are fully independent.
Baby kangaroos or joeys do stay with the family, which is part of a mob of kangaroos. Male joeys must compete with older males, bucks or boomers, in the mob, and males who lose must leave the mob and find another.
The female Tasmanian devil is the one that looks after the young Tasmanian devil joeys, and this is the case with all mammals. The Tasmanian devil is a marsupial so, like most (not all) marsupials, it has a pouch to protect its joeys while they are developing. The young joeys are born extremely undeveloped and must compete for a teat in the pouch. Tasmanian devils can actually give birth to up to 20 joeys at a time, but having only four teats, this means most of the young die. The Tasmanian devil joeys stay in the backward-facing pouch for around four months. The pouch faces backwards so that, when the mother digs, dirt does not get into the pouch. After four months, when they are fully furred, the joeys are transferred to a den. Within another three mobs or so, they start exploring outside. By the time they are forty weeks old, during January, the joeys are fully independent.