Tree kangaroos are just that - tree kangaroos. They give birth in the safety of the tree branches. Birth is not an ordeal for marsupials, as the young joeys are so tiny. All that is required is time and patience for the joey to make its way to the mother's pouch. The female tree kangaroo is more at risk from predators on the ground, so she will give birth in the trees.
There is no species called the Red Tree Kangaroo. The animal which many people believe is a red tree kangaroo is actually a Golden-mantled tree Kangaroo. Female tree kangaroos tend to give birth within the safey of tree branches off the ground.
No. As they are marsupials, kangaroos give birth to live young.
Give live birth.
Kangaroos are marsupials (mammals with pouches) and give live birth to a fetus. This fetus contiues to grow and develop in the kangaroos front pouch until it reaches a certain age to where it can fend for itself.
Marsupials give birth to partially developed young - examples: kangaroos, wombats, opossums, koalas.
Margays give birth to their young in a hollow of a tree.
Yes. They are placental mammals, all of which give birth to live young. Kangaroo rats are not the same as rat kangaroos, which are Australian marsupials (and also give birth to live young).
Yep
no
They want that endangered animal to live and hopefully give birth to another one of it's kind to increase the population.
Kangaroos are mammals, and marsupials, which means they are not born from eggs. The young emerge from the birth canal and crawl up to the pouch where they continue their development. The only mammals hatched from eggs are monotremes, which include just platypuses and echidnas.
They are born not in an egg, they are born as kangaroos just like humans are born as humans and not in an egg