Yes. Kiwis, emus and cassowaries, together with rheas and ostriches, are from a particular group of flightless birdsknown as ratites. Ratites have wings but the bones in their chests do not have the capacity for flight muscles, which is what a bird needs to fly.
Kangaroos are Marsupials and Camels aren't
Llamas, Alpacas, and Vicuna are three animals related to Camels.
Bettongs and wallabies are both members of the kangaroo family, or macropods. They are related to other kangaroos, such as Red Kangaroos, Grey Kangaroos, Pademelons, Tree Kangaroos, Quokkas and Euros (Wallaroos), to name a few.
Yes. Kangaroos, tree kangaroos, wallabies, wallaroos, potoroos and pademelons are all part of the kangaroo family.
No, but they are related to kangaroos and wombats.
Gerbils are not related to kangaroos in any way. They are both mammals, but that is where their relationship ends. Gerbils are placental mammals and members of the order Rodentia, while kangaroos are marsupials and members of the order Diprotodontia.
Thylacines were not related to kangaroos beyond being marsupials. Thylacines, or Tasmanian Tigers, were dasyurids, or carnivorous marsupials while kangaroos are herbivorous macropods (big-footed marsupials).
Yes. So are camels. :)
Camels, Llamas, Alpacas, Vicunas, Guanacos, and a couple other animals are all related. They are all camelids, like horses and donkeys are both equines.
you can eat rodents, camels, kangaroos, insects and any other animals (except thorny devils). believe me i am learning about it at school!
Koalas are not in the kangaroo family, which is Macropodidae, or the macropods.However, koalas are in the same Order as the kangaroo, which is Diprotodontia.
They certainly are. There are over 60 species of kangaroos in Australia And on the island of New Guinea. Some may not be easily recognised as related to the kangaroo, but the list includes all macropods such as wallabies, tree-kangaroos, potoroos, wallaroos, rat-kangaroos (not kangaroo-rats), pademelons and the quokka.