There is no species known as a "brown kangaroo".
A large male kangaroo is colloquially known as a "boomer".
No, the kangaroo is a marsupial or known as a mammal. A fish isn't a mammal.
The kangaroo is a mammal. It belongs to a group of mammals known as marsupials.
There is no species of kangaroo known as the Brown Kangaroo. Among the bigger species, there is only the Red Kangaroo and the Eastern Grey and Western Grey.
A male kangaroo may be known as a boomer.
The Red Kangaroo is also known as the Marloo or Plains Kangaroo. The female is sometimes referred to as a 'Blue Flier'. The scientific name is Macropus rufus.
No. The kangaroo rat is not a pouched mammal, or marsupial. The kangaroo rat is completely unrelated to the marsupil known as the kangaroo; nor is it related to the rat-kangaroo, the smaller species of kngaroos.
There was once a giant kangaroo, now known as the Procoptodon. It was one of the many species known as Australian megafauna, and became extinct thousands of years ago. The giant kangaroo no longer exists.
Aussie is short for Australia. The kangaroo is an animal native to Australia. It is not known as an Aussie kangaroo as this would imply that it also exists elsewhere and it does not.
The Mangles' kangaroo paw, also known as the Red and Green Kangaroo paw, is the floral emblem of Western Australia.
A newborn baby kangaroo, known as a joey, is less than 2 cm in length.