Spacer Spacer Spacer
Spacer
Seaview Wildlife Encounter logo, Seaview, Isle of Wight SEAVIEW WILDLIFE ENCOUNTER

Flying joey
Wallabies
Spacer
Spacer Spacer Spacer

Spacer   Spacer
 
Dippy the penguin
 
Spacer   Spacer

Spacer   Spacer
 
Wallabies
 
Spacer Spacer Spacer

spacer spacer spacer
 
Bennett's Wallabies

Scientific name
(Macropus rufogriseus)

DISTRIBUTION
Mainland Australia, Tasmania

ORDER : Marsupialia

FAMILY : Macropodidae

HABITAT
Forest, brush & open areas

DIET
Herbivores, eating leaves, grass, twigs, some fruits & vegetables.

A group of wallabies is called
a mob.

REPRODUCTION

Bennett's Wallabies are normally grey-brown with a white stomach however, albinos are found in all species of marsupial. In captivity, albino births are quite common, as albino parents will produce an albino Joey. In the wild albino births are as few as one in 10,000.
Small colonies of Bennett's Wallabies live wild in the North of England having escaped from collections in the 1930's.
Males (boomers) can weigh more than 20kg and stand up to 1.5m in height.
Females (flyers) are smaller.
Wallabies and kangaroos are macropods which means, "large footed" and are characterised by their hind legs and long tail.
Come and meet and feed our gentle, tame wallabies

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player


Web Video by Videojuice
The Wallaby is a marsupial and like all marsupials the females have a pouch in which to carry their young. A young wallaby is called a Joey.
Willaby our orphaned albino joey being hand fed Wallabies have a remarkable reproduction cycle. Females give birth after a short gestation period of 28 - 34 days, to a single young that is hardly past the embryo stage. The newborn makes its way into the pouch and attaches itself onto a teat where it stays for many months and continues to develop and grow nourished by the mother's milk. Females mate again whilst pregnant and the new embryo remains dormant until the previous young leaves the pouch.
As this cycle continues it is possible for a female to have a suckling in the pouch, a larger Joey outside the pouch and be carrying an undeveloped embryo. This is due to the remarkable ability of being able to produce two different types of milk at once!
From the nipple milk for growing young in the pouch and from another will come the milk for the older Joey outside the pouch. Maybe you will be lucky enough to see a Joey popping its head out of a mother's pouch!
  You can adopt me  
spacer spacer spacer
 
spacer   spacer


Email: info@seaviewwildlife.com

Seaview Wildlife Encounter, a top Isle of Wight attraction - site by Island Graphic Art