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Two young kangaroos seem to be posing as friends
Single swamp wallaby in the bush eating leaves
Happiest animal mum quokka and baby quokka ares enjoying beautiful summer day in Rottnest island, Western Australia
Australian Kangaroo looking puzzled at the camera in an open field on a sunny day
Photograph of an Australian Wallaby in bushland in the Blue Mountains in New South Wales, Australia.
astounded djungarian hamster
Quokka - Setonix brachyurus small macropod size of domestic cat, Like marsupials kangaroo and wallaby is herbivorous and mainly nocturnal, smaller islands off the coast of Western Australia, cute pet.
Rats live in the desert in southern Arizon
Collage of Australian marsupial mammals, isolated on white background. Wallaby, Tasmanian Devil, Wombat, Kangaroo with Joey, Quokka and Koala.
Yellow-footed antechinus in the Central Victorian bushland
Kangaroo in the wildlife
Kangaroo mother with joey grazing in a valley with golden morning light.
Tammar Wallaby feeding on leaves
Wild Swamp Wallaby in New South Wales,  Eastern Australia
Baby quokka eating ficus leaf. Rottnest Island, Western Australia. Quokka - the happiest animal on Earth - in its natural habitat
Chipmunk sitting on rock with hands to mouth and mouth open in northern Colorado, in western USA of North America. Nearest town is Walden, Colorado.
Eastern grey, Macropus giganteus, also known as great grey or Forester kangaroo with baby joey in pouch
Swamp wallaby eating  in the bush in South Australia
Woylie or Brush-tailed bettong - Bettongia penicillata small critically endangered gerbil-like mammal native to forests and shrubland of Australia, rat-kangaroo family Potoroidae.
Kangaroo grazing in a valley with blue hour light at dusk
Tiger quoll (Dasyurus maculatus) also called spotted-tail quoll or spotted-tailed Dasyure. Tasmania. Australia
The Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel (Callospermophilus lateralis) is a commonly observed rodent in Yellowstone although it's often mistaken for a large chipmunk. Unlike chipmunks, it lacks facial stripes.
Squirrel at Grand Canyon National Park in a sunny day, Arizona, USA
The North American Porcupine (Erethizon dorsatum) is the second largest rodent in North America, after the North American Beaver (Castor canadensis).  The porcupine is distinguished by its coat of about 30,000 quills that covers all of its body except underbelly, face and feet.  The quills are sharp, barbed and hollow hairs that are used primarily for defense and insulation.  When used for defense, the quills can lodge in the flesh of a victim and are difficult and painful to remove.  The porcupine’s summer diet includes twigs, roots, stems, berries, and other vegetation. In the winter, they mainly eat conifer needles and tree bark.  Porcupines are a slow-moving creature with poor distance vision.  They are nocturnal, spending their days resting in trees.  The porcupine does not hibernate in winter, preferring to stay close and sleep in their dens.  This porcupine was photographed in the woods near Williams, Arizona, USA.
Agile wallaby (Notamacropus agilis)\nsandy wallaby, Trinity Park. Queensland.
Kangaroo in the zoo
Eastern grey kangaroo resting in a paddock
Two Quokkas mother and baby
Brush-tailed Rock Wallaby (Petrogale penicillata) at Mt Rothwell
Eastern chipmunk portrait on a lichen-covered rock in a Connecticut stone wall. Chipmunks love the rocky New England landscape and use stone walls as pathways, diving into a crevice at the first hint of danger.
Free Images: "bestof:Gerard Krefft - Pig-footed Bandicoot, Chaeropus ecaudatus - Google Art Project.jpg 1830 Brunswick Germany 1830 1881 Sydney New South Wales Australia 1881 Krefft"
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