Bennett's tree-kangaroo
Bennett's tree-kangaroo is a large tree-kangaroo. Males can weigh from 11.5 kg up to almost 14 kg, while the females range between about. They are very agile and are able to leap down to another branch and have been known to drop as far as to the ground without injury.
Description
Like other tree-kangaroos it has longer forelimbs and shorter hindlimbs than terrestrial kangaroos and a long bushy tail. It is mostly dark brown above and lighter fawn on chin, throat and lower abdomen. The forehead and muzzle are greyish. The feet and hands are black. The tail has a black patch at the base and a light patch on the upper part. The ears are short and rounded.Habitat
This very elusive tree-kangaroo is found in both mountain and lowland tropical rain forests south of Cooktown, Queensland to just north of the Daintree River; an area of only about. It is also occasionally found in sclerophyll woodlands. It lives almost completely on the leaves of a wide range of rainforest trees, notably Heptapleurum actinophyllum, vines, ferns and various wild fruits.Diet
The Bennett's tree-kangaroo is a herbivore. It mostly eats leaves off 33 different plant species.Now that it is rarely hunted by Aboriginal Australians, its main predators are pythons and the dingo. It is thought to be the closest tree-kangaroo to the ancestral form.