Wallabies are kangaroos. They are members of the same family - Macropodidae, or the macropods. The only difference is that all wallaby species are smaller than the larger animals more commonly referred to as kangaroos (e.g. Red kangaroo and Grey kangaroo). Because wallabies are kangaroos, they share features such as an abdominal pouch for the females; a long, strong tail; strong hind legs built for bounding rather than running; acute sense of hearing; smaller forepaws which can be used for grasping things.
A wallaby is a smaller member of the kangaroo family, native to Australia.
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.
An antilopine wallaby is another name for an antilopine kangaroo - a species of kangaroo found in northern Australia.
Of the animals in the list, the possum is not a macropod.Macropods include any animals in the kangaroo family. The wallaby and pademelon are both in the kangaroo family.
A wallaby is a species similar to a kangaroo that doesn't grow as large. A wallabe has nothing to do with a kangaroo, as it is a mystical creature with healing powers located in it's nasal glands, according to Urban Dictionary.
A wallaby is a hopping animal. It is a member of the kangaroo family.
Kangaroo and Wallaby.
The Wallaby.
A wallaby is actually a member of the kangaroo family, but for the purposes of this question, the creatures commonly known as "kangaroos" are taller than wallabies.
There is no animal that is a cross between the kangaroo and the wallaby. Although both members of the kangaroo family, each is an entirely separate species, and they cannot interbreed. The wallaroo, another member of the kangaroo family, is a separate species again, even though its name seems to be a cross between 'wallaby' and 'kangaroo'. In size, it is smaller and much stockier than a kangaroo, but considerably larger and heavier than any species of wallaby.
The word 'wallaby' refers to any of about thirty species of macropod (Family Macropodidae). A wallaby is smaller than a kangaroo or wallaroo. It is actually a member of the kangaroo family, with its own distinct species and classification.
Kangaroo and guppy