No. Wallabies are herbivores, and they have no reason to kill other animals.
Wallabies are native to Australia.
You may not eat wallabies and crocodiles.
Wallabies are animals. It's not a name for a baby kangaroo. Both are in the same family. Wallabies are almost identical to kangaroos, but they are smaller.
many animals will eagerly take bread. But some animals like kangaroos and wallabies can be made sick by eating bread. In fact, in some cases, wallabies and kangaroos can die from eating bread, even though they seem to like it!
Wallabies are Australian animals, like kangaroos, platypuses and echidnas. The main reason wallabies thrive in Australia is that the country has few natural predators of wallabies. these animals are quite defenceless, so the biggest threat to wallabies comes from introduced species such as foxes and wild dogs. Wallabies have proliferated where they have been introduced to New Zealand for the same reason - lack of predators. Wallabies do not dig or burrow, or fight in defence: if there were ever wallabies on other continents, their population would have been quickly decimated by the larger carnivores which are found there.
Wallabies are native to Australia, but have been introduced to other countries such as New Zealand and even parts of North America.
You don't. Wallabies are native to Australia, where they are protected by law.
The wedge-tailed eagle will not try to kill a healthy adult Red or Grey kangaroo. Wedge-tailed eagles are certainly predators of adult wallabies, particularly the Rock wallabies. They are certainly known to kill joeys of all species.
These animals are all native to the country and continent of Australia.
No. However, cases of cruelty by idiotic individuals against harmless wallabies have been noted. Wallabies are native animals which are protected by law, and they may not be hunted or killed. Unlike kangaroos, they are not farmed for their meat.
The Aborigines usually killed kangaroos by spearing them. Stealthy hunters, they would often wait for kangaroos to come to their feeding grounds, or to the waterholes, where the animals would be speared.
The dingo and foxes are the main animals that eat rock wallabies. Wedge-tailed eagles and other birds of prey are also likely to swoop down and grab unwary rock-wallabies, as these types of wallabies are more likely to be out on exposed rock faces.