Animals that are like the kangaroo:
The kangaroo belongs to the order Marsupialia, or marsupials, a characteristic of which is to give birth to undeveloped young. While not all marsupials have an abdominal pouch, many besides the kangaroos do. Animals that are like kangaroos in that they carry their young in a pouch are wallabies, the koala, possums, opossums, wombats, the Tasmanian devil, bandicoots, bettongs, the bilby, quolls and the quokka.
More information about kangaroos: There are about 63 types of kangaroo.
There are many varieties of kangaroo which come under the heading of "macropod". Members of the macropod family are characterised by their big feet ("macropod" means "great-footed"), their front pouches, and the fact that they move primarily by hopping. They are similar in appearance and characteristics, but differ considerably in size.
There are four main species that are commonly called kangaroo. These are:
Other species of kangaroos are smaller, and they include:
Then there are the potoroids - a sub-species of the kangaroo family. Examples include:
Giant kangaroos no longer exist.
Giant kangaroos were believed to have existed around 6000 to 10000 years ago.
Giant kangaroos were never endangered. The concept of a species being listed as "endangered" was introduced in the twentieth century. Giant kangaroos died out thousands of years ago, along with many other species of Australian megafauna.
Giant kangaroos became extinct many thousands of years ago. They were herbivores, as kangaroos are today, roaming the extensive grasslands of Australia and feeding on the grasses there. New evidence suggests that their extinction was caused by severe drought, which killed off the giant kangaroos' food supply.
Giant kangaroos are believed to have become extinct anywhere from 15,000 years ago to around 45,000 years ago.
Kangaroos which are extinct include:The genus Procoptodon which consisted of the giant short-faced kangaroosThe genus Protemnodon which consisted of the giant wallabies
shed there skin
Whales, kangaroos, dogs, rabbits, cats
kangaroos,rabbits, and sheep
Frogs,rabbits,kangaroos,people,jackrabbits
Yes, it is suspected that there were giant kangaroos once upon a time but they don't exist anymore the largest is the red kangaroo and is the size of a small adult.
Yes. Kangaroos do have knees. They are made of fibrous tissue.