Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The average banded hare-wallaby weighs 1.7 kg, with females weighing more than males.
The banded hare-wallaby has a short nose.
Only the skull was kept, and this is all the evidence scientists have today for the Lake Mackay hare-wallaby's existence.
The banded hare-wallaby reaches maturity at one year of age, breeding usually starts in the second year.
This new subfamily includes the banded hare-wallaby and the fossil genus Troposodon.
The Rufous hare-wallaby is being reintroduced to mainland Australia.
The spectacled hare-wallaby is found across northern Australia in tropical tussock or spinifex habitats.
The rufous hare-wallaby is a nocturnal herbivore that eats herbs, leaves and seeds.
The banded hare-wallaby is nocturnal and tends to live in groups at nesting sites; this species is quite social.
The oldest known fossil of Lagorchestes is an 11,000-year-old one of the extant spectacled hare-wallaby.
The rufous hare-wallaby (Lagorchestes hirsutus) is a small wallaby found in Australia.
The small kangaroo was an Eastern Hare-wallaby, a species that became extinct a few years after the arrival of the first European settlers.
The rufous hare-wallaby has rufous-grey fur and is the smallest hare-wallaby.
Rufous hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes hirsutus unnamed subsp.
The island is home to one of the few remaining colonies of the Banded Hare-wallaby (Lagostrophus fasciatus).
- Lake Mackay hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes asomatus (extinct)
-Eastern hare-wallaby, Lagorchestes leporides (extinct)
The rufous hare-wallaby (Lagorchestes hirsutus), a small desert marsupial of Australia; also mala or maala.
The eastern hare-wallaby was a small macropod, slightly larger and more slender than its surviving relative the rufous hare-wallaby.
The Rufous hare-wallaby (Lagorchestes hirsutus) is now extinct in the wild, and a further ten species of mammal are extinct in the subregion.
It includes all living members of the Macropodidae except for the Banded Hare-wallaby (Lagostrophus fasciatus), the only surviving member of the subfamily Sthenurinae.
The banded hare-wallaby or mernine (Lagostrophus fasciatus) is a marsupial that is currently found on the Islands of Bernier and Dorre off western Australia.
The Lake Mackay hare-wallaby is known only from a single animal collected in 1932 between Mount Farewell and Lake Mackay in the Northern Territory.
Threatened species which are found in the park include the Golden-shouldered Parrot, Star Finch, Red Goshawk, Lakeland Downs Mouse and the Spectacled Hare-wallaby.
There are two living subfamilies in the Macropodidae family: Lagostrophinae is represented by a single species, the Banded Hare-wallaby; the remainder, about 60 species, makes up the subfamily Macropodinae.
The oldest known fossil of Lagorchestes is an 11,000-year-old one of the extant spectacled hare-wallaby.
A species of Lagorchestes, Hare-wallaby, small members of the Macropodidae family.
Lagorchestes (hare-wallabies)(4 species, 2 extant)
It is not as closely related to the other hare wallabies (genus Lagorchestes) as the hare wallabies are to the other wallabies.