Rabaroo

Rabbiroos are rare animals that inhabit the Earth Kingdom.

Anatomy
The rabbiroo has the face and long, floppy ears of a rabbit, as well as the body and particularly large hind legs of a kangaroo, including a pouch in the case of a female. It stands nearly as tall as a grown man. The rabbiroo's head, including ears and neck, is brown, although its muzzle is a light beige; its upper torso, forelimbs, belly, and underside of the tail are also beige, while its hands, hind legs, and tail are brown. Baby rabbiroos have a chunky, potato-like body shaped similar to that of baby rabbits.

Connection
The rabbiroo resembles a cross between a rabbit and a kangaroo or a wallaby. It has the head, ears, and teeth of a rabbit with the body of a kangaroo or a wallaby. Their offspring are raised in the same method as the kangaroo with the young remaining in the mother's pouch. Much like the rabbit, they tend to have multiple births. Both rabbits and kangaroos hop on their hind feet.

Behavior
According to Ba Sing Se zookeeper, Kenji, the rabbiroo enjoys hopping in large fields. It also appears to have a taste for cabbage. The female of the species carries her young in her pouch until they are ready to survive on their own. One such rabbiroo in the zoo had three joeys.

Trivia

 * Seventy years after the Hundred Year War, a pro-bending team named itself the Red Sands Rabbiroos.