green and gold
Blue Gray
There are swamp wallabies, scrub wallabies and rock wallabies. The average rock wallaby can jump two and a half times its own height, and can safely leap down from much greater heights. In normal jumping, their focus is more on forward speed and distance, rather than height.
Wallabies are known to be social and territorial animals that live in groups called mobs. They are generally active at dawn and dusk, known as crepuscular, and spend their days resting and foraging for food. They are agile jumpers and use their strong hind legs to hop around their natural habitats.
Wallabies have colouring that enables them to camouflage naturally within their habitat. Whether they are rock wallabies, swamp wallabies or brush wallabies, they tend to blend in with their environment.
I am not sure if there is any scientific proof available, but I was advised by a shooter today (one would think they have experience in knowing), that the Bennett's Wallabies' fur begins to lighten as they starve :( We have had a drought here in Australia, and where I am in Tasmania there are a lot of wallabies starving to death :( So just maybe it could be said that the wallabies' fur colour changes in a very dry season of no food...
Wallabies eat grass, herbs, leaves, fruit and plants. Wallabies are herbivores.
Wallabies do not live in the desert.
No. There are lots of wallabies still in existence.
Wallabies
No. Wallabies do not live in water.
The plural of wallaby is wallabies.
No. Wallabies are native to Australia.