No, kangaroos do not reproduce fruit.
it breeds with kangaroos everyday
Kangaroos, like all mammals, are sexual. All mammals reproduce sexually.
Tree kangaroos eat the fruit of whatever trees are found in their tropical rainforest environment. Australian tree kangaroos are particularly fond of the fruit of the Native Longan (Dimocarpus australianus), Variegated Fig (Ficus variegata) and native olives (olea paniculate).
The only ways in which kangaroos and jellyfish are alike is that that they are both living members of the kingdom Animalia, which must feed, respire and reproduce.
Eastern grey kangaroos do not, on the whole, eat fruit. They may occasionally be tempted by berries of some plants, but this is more an individual preference, or even learned behaviour. In their native state, they feed on grasses and shoots of young trees. The only kangaroos that eat fruit as a regular part of their diet are the tree kangaroos, and these creatures do not eat all types of fruit.
Tree kangaroos are kangaroos - just a few of over 60 species of kangaroo. However, differences between tree kangaroos and the animal most commonly thought of as kangaroos (Red kangaroos and Grey kangaroos) are:Tree kangaroos are indeed arboreal-dwelling, spending much of their time feeding and resting in trees. Red and grey kangaroos are strictly ground-dwelling, and cannot climb at all.Tree kangaroos are smaller and stockier, and certainly more agile. They have stronger front legs to assist with climbing, and longer tails to help with balance.Tree kangaroos eat leaves and fruit. Red and Grey kangaroos do not readily eat fruit in their native habitat.
Fruit flies typically take about 8-10 days to reproduce and reach maturity.
Kangaroos are mammals, so like all mammals the produce sexually. But the actual ritual of intercourse has never been observed by humans. It has been speculated to involve bouncing and lots of latex.
There is no such thing as a "regular" kangaroo, given that there are over 60 species of kangaroo. However, differences between tree kangaroos and the animal most commonly thought of as kangaroos (Red kangaroos and Grey kangaroos) are:Tree kangaroos are indeed arboreal-dwelling, spending much of their time feeding and resting in trees. Red and grey kangaroos are strictly ground-dwelling, and cannot climb at all.Tree kangaroos are smaller and stockier, and certainly more agile. They have stronger front legs to assist with climbing, and longer tails to help with balance.Tree kangaroos eat leaves and fruit. Red and Grey kangaroos do not readily eat fruit in their native habitat.
Many plants require fruit production to reproduce
An eggplant produces fruit. The seeds are inside, like a tomato.
Olives reproduce like any other fruit - you get flowers, you get pollen, you get bees. Voila! Fruit. Like any other tree fruit, like apples for instance, the trees produce flowers, they are pollinated, and fruit is produced from the flowers.