they travel in groups
In the mom kangaroo's pouch.
No. Some of the smaller species (such as rock wallabies) live in a colony.Larger kangaroos, such as the Red Kangaroo, the Eastern Grey and the Western Grey, tend to travel in groups known as mobs. Smaller members of the kangaroo family, such as wallabies, tend to have smaller family groups, and they do not travel like the larger ones do in search of food.The smallest species, such as the musky rat-kangaroo, tend to be solitary, and not travel in groups at all.
Nothing, they get around by their own feet.It depends on the species. Larger kangaroos, such as the Red Kangaroo, the Eastern Grey and the Western Grey, tend to travel in groups known as mobs. Smaller members of the kangaroo family, such as wallabies, tend to have smaller family groups, and they do not travel like the larger ones do in search of food.The smallest species, such as the musky rat-kangaroo, tend to be solitary, and not travel in groups at all.
Yes and no. It depends on the species.Larger kangaroos, such as the Red Kangaroo, the Eastern Grey and the Western Grey, tend to travel in groups known as mobs, rather than "herds".Smaller members of the kangaroo family, such as wallabies, tend to have smaller family groups, and they do not travel like the larger ones do in search of food.The smallest species, such as the musky rat-kangaroo, tend to be solitary, and not travel in groups at all.Yes - commonly called a Mob.
<b> Bungalow kangaroo court
It depends on the species. Larger kangaroos, such as the red Kangaroo, the Eastern grey and the western grey, tend to travel in groups known as mobs. Smaller members of the kangaroo family, such as wallabies, tend to have smaller family groups, and they do not travel like the larger ones do in search of food. The smallest species, such as the musky rat-kangaroo, tend to be solitary, and not travel in groups at all.
Anyone that is a kangaroo.
The largest kangaroo, the Red Kangaroo, is the fastest.
An antilopine kangaroo is a species of kangaroo found in northern Australia.
The plural of "kangaroo" is "kangaroos"
The kangaroo is a marsupial.
The wallaby is the smallest of the three. However, they are all members of the kangaroo family, and the smallest kangaroo is the musky rat-kangaroo: in which case, the kangaroo is the smallest.