The wallaby is most nearly identified with Australia's marsupial, kangaroo. The wallaby is for the most part littler than a kangaroo albeit some wallaby bodies have been known to grow 6ft tall.

Because of its moderately vast size, the wallaby has few regular predators inside its surroundings. Canines, for example, dingos and foxes are the fundamental predators of the wallaby alongside large reptiles, for example, crocodiles and snakes. The wallaby has the capacity shield itself against predators by hitting them with its long, influential tail.

The wallaby is a marsupial implying that the female wallaby has a pocket on her tummy in which to raise her young. The female wallaby conceives a solitary infant wallaby (sporadically twins), known as a joey, after an incubation time of just a month. The joey then slithers up into its mother's pocket, where it is tended to and supported until it is completely created.