Kangaroo or Wallaby species

Moderators

The following moderators provide knowledge and expertise for Kangaroos & Wallabies:

Liam.m  |  DonFletcher  |  Darcy  |  PatrickCampbell  |  ChrisAllen  |  CarbonAI  |  Alburyconservationcompany  |  Gaia  |  BelindaWilson  |  BLSHTwo  |  ChrisM  |  Shell.S.  |  Topknot  |  AndrewMorrison  |  DMeco  |  laura.williams  |  Wildlifewarrior80  |  MatthewHiggins  |  BrianH

Become a moderator

15 species

Macropodidae (family) (Unknown kangaroo or wallaby)

Macropodidae (family)
Macropodidae (family)
Macropodidae (family)

Macropus agilis (Agile Wallaby)

Macropus agilis
Macropus agilis
Macropus agilis

Macropus eugenii (Tammar wallaby)

Macropus fuliginosus (Western grey kangaroo)

Macropus fuliginosus
Macropus fuliginosus
Macropus fuliginosus

Macropus parryi (Whiptail Wallaby)

Macropus parryi
Macropus parryi

Macropus sp. (Macropod)

Notamacropus rufogriseus (Red-necked Wallaby)

Notamacropus rufogriseus
Notamacropus rufogriseus
Notamacropus rufogriseus

Osphranter rufus (Red Kangaroo)

Osphranter rufus
Osphranter rufus
Osphranter rufus

Petrogale assimilis (Allied Rock Wallaby)

Petrogale assimilis
Petrogale assimilis
Petrogale assimilis

Petrogale penicillata (Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby)

Petrogale penicillata
Petrogale penicillata
Petrogale penicillata

Thylogale billardierii (Tasmanian pademelon)

Thylogale billardierii
Thylogale billardierii
Thylogale billardierii

Thylogale thetis (Red-necked Pademelon)

Thylogale thetis
Thylogale thetis
Thylogale thetis

Wallabia bicolor (Swamp Wallaby)

Wallabia bicolor
Wallabia bicolor
Wallabia bicolor

Conservation level

  • All conservation levels (change?)

Invasiveness

  • All invasiveness levels (change?)

Machine learning

Machine learning is enabled.

Follow Kangaroos & Wallabies

Receive alerts of new sightings

Subscribe

Share field guide

Share link to Kangaroos & Wallabies field guide

2,152,973 sightings of 19,940 species in 6,475 locations from 11,410 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.