Quokka joeys are completely dependent on their mother for about 6 months (26 weeks). They will start eating grass at this age, but still suckle from the mother for another two months.
about two weeks
Quokkas tend to give birth to a single joey at a time.
No, the quokka is not a member of the possum family. It is a member of the macropod family, otherwise known as the kangaroos. For many years, it was thought to be a type of wallaby, but it is now recognised as being in a category of its own.
A quokka would not be a good zoo animal, as they like to hide in vegetation undergrowth. Quokkas are unique for the way they create tunnels that they use as runways through dense vegetation. habitat preferred habitat includes thick tussock grass, and it is unlikely that many zoos could recreate the quokka's habitat appropriately.
it really all depends on the horse itself
Man causes the greatest threats to the quokka's environment, just as he does to the environment of so many animals. The quokka, though not officially endangered yet, is at risk of being endangered because it is vulnerable to predation by feral cats, dogs and foxes. These animals have all been brought to Australia by man, from the earliest years of European settlement.
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20
About 6 lbs.
There are two weeks in two weeks.
There are 112 weeks in 112 weeks.
There are four weeks in four weeks.