try petsmart
PetSmart or an online rat site.
No they cant live anywhere eles.
The Red kangaroo lives in Australia. Red Kangaroos do not live in sandy deserts because there is not enough food for them. They live in grasslands, bushland and other well-vegetated areas, as well as semi-arid areas where there is plenty of vegetation and permanent waterholes. Much of Australia's desert is not sandy desert. The red kangaroo can be found in parts of the Simpson Desert, Gibson Desert and the Great Victoria Desert.
The Red Kangaroo is found throughout the interior of the Australian continent - not the dry desert but in semi-arid desert areas - and on part of the Western Australian coast.
No, kangaroos prefer grasslands rather than deserts.
Kangaroo (other than in zoos)
Unless that someone is a kangaroo rat or other such animal, they will not survive more than a day or two on that little amount of water. A human needs about 2 gallons of water per day in a hot desert.
The bush provides for a kangaroo's needs much better than the desert does. The bush and grasslands have all the food a kangaroo requires, such as fresh shoots and grasses, whereas the desert does not. The bush also offers shelter during the hot day, or during rain.
Elephants cannot jump, so, yes, a kangaroo, or any other animal, can jump higher than an elephant can.
Kalahari Desert.
There are about 60 species of Kangaroo in Australia which are unique to Australia.There are several species of Tree Kangaroo which are native to New Guinea and parts of Indonesia. These include the Matschie's tree kangaroo, Golden mantled tree kangaroo, Grizzled tree kangaroo, Ursine tree kangaroo, Doria's tree kangaroo, Seri's tree kangaroo, Goodfellow's tree kangaroo, Lowlands tree kangaroo, Dingiso and Tenkile.However, some species of wallaby (a smaller member of the kangaroo family) have been introduced to other countries such as New Zealand and even Scotland.
Other than a baby kangaroo, nothing else is called a joey.
No. The vast majority of kangaroo species are herbivores, and are thus prey to other species. They are not predators, except for a few of the smaller rat-kangaroo species which are omnivores and feed on insect larvae, among other things.
Kangaroo (other than in zoos)