Australian Hopping Dylanus

The Australian Hopping Dylanus is an extinct dylanus that was indigenous to savannahs, deserts, and rainforests in Australia. It resembled an American Common Dylanus, but had a more robust jawbone, thicker brow ridges, and large kangaroo-like feet to escape from predators quickly. It was also the ancestor of the New Zealand Giant Dylanus. It had a similar niche to some of today's kangaroos (in which it lived alongside), and its predators were thylacines, marsupial lions, desert killer kangaroos, and the extinct Megalania. It was an omnivore that fed on berries, leaves, carcasses of small animals, and sometimes live small animals. The reason for its extinction is unknown, but it is possible that humans overhunted them to extinction, combination of that and Elecman.EXEs hunting them to extinction.

De-Extinction Plans
In early 2012, a group of American scientists have successfully sequenced the genome and DNA of the Australian hopping dylanus. In mid-2017, people have already injected the DNA of the Australian hopping dylanus in the female domestic dylanuses to act as surrogate mothers to the new Australian hopping dylanuses.