No. Neither a pademelon nor a paddy melon would go well with ice cream. The pademelon is a small native Australian marsupial, in the kangaroo family. The pademelon is a wild melon commonly found in the outback. It is rather bland in taste.
The seven species of pademelon are: Tasmanian Pademelon (Thylogale billardierii) Brown's Pademelon (Thylogale browni) Dusky Pademelon (Thylogale brunii) Calaby's Pademelon (Thylogale calabyi) Mountain Pademelon (Thylogale lanatus) Red-legged Pademelon (Thylogale stigmatica) Red-necked Pademelon (Thylogale thetis)
There are seven different subspecies of Pademelon, they are listed by the IUCN Red List, or the International Union of Conservation for Nature as follows;Tasmanian Pademelon - status: Least ConcernNew Guinea or Brown's Pademelon - status: VulnerableDusky Pademelon - status: VulnerableCalaby's Pademelon - status: EndangeredMountain Pademelon - status: EndangeredRed-legged Pademelon - status: Least ConcernRed-necked Pademelon - status: Least ConcernFor more details, please see the sites listed below.
All seven species of pademelon are nocturnal.
no its just regular icecream or else they would nt call it icecream but frozen yogurt
The red-necked pademelon belongs to the genus Thylogale.
Yes. The pademelon is a macropod. It is one of the smaller members of the kangaroo family.
A pademelon generally has a single joey, just once a year.
no its just regular icecream or else they would nt call it icecream but Frozen Yogurt
A pademelon would not grow in a garden, as it is a small Australian marsupial and a member of the kangaroo family. A paddy melon, on the other hand, could quite conceivably grow in a garden, although it is more likely to be found growing wild in the Australian outback.
The Tasmanian pademelon, a small member of the kangaroo family, feeds on native grasses and broad leafed plants.
no it lives in the open
ice-cream is made by freezing cream and milk and and..............stuff