This would depend upon the species of kangaroo to which one was referring.
An adult kangaroo of any of the largest and most well-known species, such as the Red kangaroo, Eastern Grey or Western Grey, would be stronger than a dingo. The wallaroo is also a distinctly stocky, heavy-built species of kangaroo; some adult males might be stronger than the fairly finely-structured pure dingoes.
However, there are over 60 species of kangaroos. None of the wallaby species would be stronger, nor the smaller rat-kangaroos, bettongs, pademelons or tree kangaroos.
The Kangaroo is the Primary Consumer. So it works like this... Grass Kangaroo Dingo This is an example of a food chain. The Grass is eaten by the Kangaroo which is eaten by the Dingo. The Grass is the Primary Producer, the Kangaroo is the Primary Consumer and the Dingo is the Secondary Consumer. Hope that helps xx
Both the kangaroo and the dingo were in Australia in the 1800s. The kangaroo is native to Australia, and dingoes were brought over by the Aborigines, although it is not certain when.
yes
The Dingo was native to Australia when it wassettled by the British. It was originally assumed that they arrived with the first human inhabitants, However the dating of available fossil evidence supports the new view. the dingo arrived in Australia from Asia about 3,000 years ago.
The Red kangaroo has no natural predators apart from the dingo, a relative newcomer to the continent. Only a very hungry dingo might take on an adult kangaroo, but joeys are commonly subject to predation from dingoes and eagles.
Kangaroo Jack and Koalas and Kiwis. You're Welcome!
Apart from Man, the main enemy of kangaroos is the dingo.
Dingo get energy from eating animals like Red kangaroo and Magpie goose.
The Red kangaroo has no natural predators apart from the dingo, a relative newcomer to the continent. Only a very hungry dingo might take on an adult kangaroo, but joeys are commonly subject to predation from dingoes and eagles.Kangaroos are mainly hunted by man, who actively seeks to cull their numbers in areas where overpopulation is a problem.
It is unlikely, but not impossible. Dingoes are larger and therefore stronger; however, a Tasmanian devil has stronger jaws, and could deliver a fatal bite if it could reach a dingo's jugular.
No. Kangaroos and coyotes occupy different continents.
No, that would be impossible. A lion is more fierce, stronger, and larger than a small weenie dingo