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Kangaroos are large marsupials that
are found only in Australia. They are identified by their muscular tails,
strong back legs, large feet, short fur and long, pointed ears. Like all
marsupials, a sub-type of mammal, females have pouches that contain mammary
glands, where their young live until they are old enough to emerge.
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Kangaroos are in the Macropodidae
family, which also includes tree-kangaroos, wallabies, wallaroos, quokkas and
pademelons. When people think of kangaroos, the four species that typically
come to mind are in the genus Macropus: the
antilopine kangaroo, the red kangaroo, the western gray kangaroo and the
eastern gray kangaroo. They are sometimes referred to as the "great
kangaroos" because these species are much larger than other kangaroos.
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However, there are 12 species of
tree-kangaroos in the Dendrolagus genus,
according to the Integrated Taxonomic Information System. And, bettongs, in the Potoridae family, are called
rat-kangaroos.
· Size
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The largest kangaroo, as well as the
largest marsupial, is the red kangaroo, according to National Geographic. The length from the red kangaroo's
head to its rump is 3.25 to 5.25 feet (1 to 1.6 meters) long. Its tail adds
another 35.5 to 43.5 inches (90 to 110 centimeters) to its length and its
entire body weighs around 200 lbs. (90 kilograms).
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The smallest kangaroo is the musky rat-kangaroo. It is only 6 to 8 inches (15.24 to
20.32 cm) long and weighs only 12 ounces (340 grams). Its ratlike tail adds
another 5 to 6 inches (12.7 to 15.24 cm) to its length.
· Habitat
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Most kangaroos live on the continent
of Australia, though each species has a different place it likes to call home.
For example, the musky rat-kangaroo likes to nestle down in little nests on the
floor of the rainforests in northeastern Queensland. Gray kangaroos like the
forests of Australia and Tasmania, on the other hand. The antilopine kangaroo can be found in the monsoonal
eucalyptus woodlands of extreme northern Australia. Tree-kangaroos live in the
upper branches of trees in the rainforests of Queensland, as well as on the
island of New Guinea.
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· Kangaroos at Pinnaroo Valley Memorial Park.
· Credit: Flickr/paul dynamik.
· Habits
Kangaroos are the only large animals
that hop as a primary means of locomotion. Their springy hind legs and feet are
much stronger and larger than their arms (or "forelimbs"). According
to the San Diego Zoo, kangaroos can cover 15 feet (7 m) in a single hop and can
hop as fast as 30 mph (48 kph). Usually, 20 mph (32 kph) is considered their
cruising speed. When feeding, kangaroos use a slower, walking movement, and for
that they use their muscular tail as a kind of fifth leg, pushing off the
ground as they move along.
Kangaroos are social and live in
groups called a mob, a herd or a troop. Kangaroos in a mob will groom each
other and protect each other from danger. If a kangaroo suspects there is
danger in the area, it will stomp its foot on the ground to alert others. If it
comes to blows, a kangaroo will box and kick its opponent.
· Diet
Kangaroos are herbivores. They eat
grasses, flowers, leaves, ferns, moss and even insects. Like cows, kangaroos
regurgitate their food and re-chew it before it is ready to be totally
digested.
A juvenile kangaroo views the outside world from
the pouch of an adult female Eastern gray kangaroo.
· Credit: Fir0002/Flagstaffotos
· Offspring
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Probably the best-known fact about
kangaroos is that they carry their young in a pouch. A female kangaroo is
pregnant for 21 to 38 days, and she can give birth to up to four offspring at
one time, though this is unusual.
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At birth, the baby, called a joey,
can be as small as a grain of rice, or as big as a bee, at 0.2 to 0.9 inches (5
to 25 millimeters), according to the San Diego Zoo. When the joey is born, it is guided
safely into the comfy pouch, where it gestates for another 120 to 450
days.
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Inside the pouch, the joey is
protected and can feed by nursing from its mother's nipples. Joeys urinate and
defecate in the mother's pouch. The lining of the pouch absorbs some of the
mess, but occasionally the mother will need to clean it out, which she does by
inserting her long snout into the pouch and using her tongue to remove the
contents. A young joey will remain attached to a nipple while the mother does
this, but any older ones will be temporarily kicked out.
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Another interesting fact about the
mother kangaroo is that she is able to suckle two joeys at different
developmental stages at the same time with milk that has different nutritional
content, the New York Times has reported.
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Joeys grow quickly, though, and at 14
to 20 months for females or 2 to 4 years for males, they will be fully matured.
· Classification/taxonomy
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The taxonomy of kangaroos,
tree-kangaroos and rat-kangaroos, according to ITIS, is:
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Kingdom: Animalia
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Subkingdom: Bilateria
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Infrakingdom:
Deuterostomia
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Phylum: Chordata
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Subphylum: Vertebrata
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Infraphylum:
Gnathostomata
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Superclass: Tetrapoda
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Class: Mammalia
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Subclass: Theria
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Infraclass: Metatheria
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Order: Diprotodontia
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Suborder: Macropodiformes
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'Great kangaroos'
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Family: Macropodidae
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Subfamily: Macropodinae
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Genus & species: Macropus fuliginosus (western gray kangaroo; three
subspecies), Macropus giganteus (eastern
gray kangaroo; two subspecies), Macropus antilopinus (antilopine
kangaroo), Macropus rufus (red kangaroo)
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Tree-kangaroos
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Family: Macropodidae
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Subfamily: Macropodinae
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Genus: Dendrolagus
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Species: 12, including Dendrolagus bennettianus (Bennett's
tree-kangaroo), Dendrolagus goodfellowi (Goodfellow's
tree-kangaroo), Dendrolagus matschiei (Huon
tree-kangaroo) and Dendrolagus spadix (Lowlands
tree-kangaroo).
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Rat-kangaroos
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Family: Potoridae
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Genera & species: Aepyprymnus rufescens (Rufous bettong or Rufous
rat-kangaroo), Bettongia (four species of
bettongs, or short-nosed rat-kangaroos), Caloprymnus campestris (desert
rat-kangaroo)
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Musky rat-kangaroos
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Family: Hypsiprymnodontidae
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Genus & species: Hypsiprymnodon moschatus
· Kangaroo
ancestors
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There is a rich fossil record for
kangaroo ancestors and ancient relatives; giant kangaroos plodded through the
Pleistocene (2.6 million to 11,700 years ago) and the Pliocene (5.3 million to
2.6 million years ago). And about 20 million years ago, tiny ancestors of
modern kangaroos and a related group of kangaroos with fangs scurried through
dense forests in northwestern Queensland, Australia, a region that is now arid
outback.
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In a study published in February
2016, scientists described a new kangaroo genus, Cookeroo, and two new species: Cookeroo bulwidarri, dated to about 23 million
years ago, and Cookeroo hortusensis, which
lived between 18 million and 20 million years ago. These ancient
kangaroos' bodies probably measured about 17 to 20 inches (42 to 52
centimeters) long. C. bulwidarri and C. hortusensis didn't hop, navigating their forest
home on all fours and sharing it with a diverse collection of animals:
marsupial moles, feather-tailed possums, ancient koalas and crocodiles.