A predator eats its prey. This includes predators of baby kangaroos, which eat the young joeys.
It's not a pocket, it's a pouch but the baby stays there for protection from things in the outside world such as predators. The joey (baby kangaroo) stays in the pouch until it is old enough to fend for itself
Kangaroos do not drop their joeys out of their pouches. There is a myth that some will do this in order to get away from predators, but this does not happen.
Most of the major predators for the kangaroo are extinct. However, they may still be preyed on by reptiles, dogs, and cats.
Dingoes are the main predators.Other Red Kangaroo predators include wedgetail eagles.Introduced predators such as foxes, wild dogs and feral cats are a threat to joeys.
Their predators are Coyotes, Foxes, Badgers, Snakes, and Owls.
fox
They are mostly snakes.
people
a pouch potato.
A baby elephant is a calf. A baby kangaroo is a joey. A baby monkey has no special name - just baby monkey or infant.
The musky rat-kangaroo avoids its predators by foraging for food at night, being nocturnal. It is the smallest species of kangaroo in Australia, so it hides easily under shrubs, and can dig burrows in which to hide.
A newborn baby kangaroo, known as a joey, is less than 2 cm in length.