7 1/2 months. They can sometimes leave as early as six months or as late as eight months.
Wallabies are not pets. It is illegal to keep wallabies and kangaroos as pets anywhere in the world - but very few people are aware of this.
9 months.
7 1/2 months. They can sometimes leave as early as six months or as late as eight months.
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.
they stay in thier dads pouch for about 4-45 days at maxium
You must mean how long is their gestation period. Well they need only about 30 days until actual birth, but being marsupial they will also need to spend a long time in mom's pouch, as much as 8 or 9 months. Then finally they're wallabies, no longer just wannabes.
Baby kangaroos feed on their mothers' milk for up to a year. They are completely dependent upon the milk for the first 6-7 months (for the larger species), but even after they begin eating vegetation, they will still return to the pouch for milk from time to time. Female kangaroos can have two joeys of completely different ages in her pouch at the same time, each drinking a different type of milk suitable for their age, whilst a third, almost-grown joey may stick its head inside the pouch occasionally to also have a drink.
how long does a baby shark have to stay in the mothers stomach.
4 weeks
2 years.
The joey is in the mother kangaroo's pouch for about eight months (235 days), depending on the species. The young Joey continues to suckle until it is about 12 months old. For the animals most commonly recognised as kangaroos (e.g. Red kangaroos and Grey kangaroos), the average amount of time the baby kangaroo, or joey, stays in the pouch is about 7 - 8 months. This time is fairly consistent also with some of the smaller species of kangaroos, such as the potoroos and wallabies.
Wallabies are native to Australia, where they are found in all of the states, including the island state of Tasmania.Wallabies are grouped according to the habitat in which they live, so there are shrub wallabies, brush wallabies, and rock wallabies. Shrub wallabies inhabit fairly flat bushland areas which are reasonably open, unlike the brushwallaby which prefers more closed forest, with denser undergrowth. Rock wallabies are especially suited to rocky hillsides and mountainsides, including open rock faces.Predators of wallabies include wedgetail eagles and other birds of prey.Wallabies are macropods, i.e. members of the kangaroo family, having "long feet" (the name macropod means long footed).Wallabies are marsupials, meaning their joeys are born very undeveloped, then crawl by instinct to the mother's pouch, where they latch onto a teat which swells in their mouth. here they continue their development for many months.