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Kangaroo

common name for some marsupials indigenous to Australia in the family Macropodidae

A kangaroo is an Australian marsupial. It belongs to the genus Macropus. The common name 'kangaroo' is used for the four large species, and there are another 50 species of smaller macropods. The kangaroos are common in Australia and can also be found in New Guinea. Kangaroos move by hopping.

Kangaroo
Temporal range: Early Miocene - Present
Female Eastern grey kangaroo with joey (baby) in pouch
Scientific classification
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Species

4 species, see text.

Common names

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  • kangaroos: large males are 2 metres tall (6ft 7 inches) and weigh 90 kg (200 lb).
  • wallaroos: between kangaroos and wallabies in size.
  • wallabies: small to medium-sized macropods.
  • tree-kangaroos: Dendrolagus, adapted for arboreal locomotion. They live in the tropical rainforests of New Guinea, far northeastern Queensland, and some of the islands in the region.

The four species

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Red kangaroo grazing

There are four living species of kangaroos:

  • The red kangaroo (Macropus rufus) is the largest marsupial anywhere in the world. The red kangaroo lives in the arid and semi-arid centre of Australia. A large male can be two metres (6 ft 7 in) tall and weigh 90 kg (200 lb).
  • The eastern grey kangaroo (Macropus giganteus) is less well-known than the red (outside of Australia), but the most often seen, as its range covers the fertile eastern part of the continent.
  • The western grey kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus) is slightly smaller again at about 54 kg (119 lb) for a large male. It is found in the south part of Western Australia, South Australia near the coast, and the Darling River basin.
  • The antilopine kangaroo (Macropus antilopinus) is similar to the Eastern and Western greys. Like them, it lives on the grassy plains and woodlands. It lives in large groups.

There are also about 50 other smaller macropods in 10 genera in the Macropodidae family.

Evolution

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The evolutionary ancestors of marsupials split from placental mammals during the Jurassic period about 160 million years ago (mya).[1] The earliest known fossil macropod dates back about 11.61 to 28.4 mya, either in the Miocene or late Oligocene. It was found in South Australia. Unfortunately, the fossil could not be identified any further than the family. A Queensland fossil of a species similar to Hadronomas has been dated at 5.33 to 11.61 mya, in the late Miocene or early Pliocene.

Background

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Kangaroos hop to move around quickly, and walk on two or four legs while moving slowly. They cannot walk in any direction and cannot hop backwards.[2] They can hop or jump as far as about three times their own height. They can also swim if necessary. The kangaroo is a herbivore, eating mainly grass, but some species also eat shrubs. A female Kangaroo has three vaginas.[3]

Kangaroos are marsupials: they carry their young in a special pouch on their bodies. Baby kangaroos are called joeys. Kangaroos live in large groups, called mobs.[4] Each group is made up of breeding females, their young and several adult males. One of the males is the dominant male, he is the only one that breeds with the females in the mob.[4]

Because they are mostly found in Australia, Australians see it as a national symbol. The kangaroo is featured holding the Australian coat of arms. The Australian airline, Qantas, uses the kangaroo as its emblem. The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) also a has a kangaroo emblem.

Kangaroos can be dangerous because of their powerful legs. They can lean back on their tails to deliver powerful kicks. In 2009, a man went to save his dog which had chased a kangaroo into a farm dam. The kangaroo was able to hold the dog underwater nearly drowning it. The kangaroo gave the man several big kicks before he was able to grab his dog and escape from the dam. He needed hospital treatment for his injuries.[5]

The name

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The word kangaroo is an Australian Aboriginal word from the Guugu Yimidhirr people of north Queensland. The word was recorded by Captain James Cook in August 1770.[6] It was the name for the grey kangaroo, Macropus robustus.[7] Cook's ship, the HMS Endeavour, had been damaged on coral on the Great Barrier Reef. It took seven weeks for the ship to be repaired on the banks of a river, now the Endeavour River, at the site of the town of Cooktown. This gave Cook, Joseph Banks and other crew members time to explore the area and the plants and animals. The skin and skull of a kangaroo was taken back to England to be put on show. In James Boswell's book "Life of Johnson" he describes Dr. Samuel Johnson in 1793 hopping around the room to explain to people how a kangaroo moved. When Arthur Phillip and the First Fleet arrived in Sydney in 1788, they were surprised that the Aborigines did not know the word "kangaroo." It took them a while to realize that Aborigines at Sydney spoke a different language to those from Cooktown.[7]

Extinct family

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There was a now-extinct family of giant kangaroos, the Sthenurinae.[8] They were adapted for browsing in woodland areas, rather than open grassland. The largest (Procoptodon goliah) had an estimated body mass of 240 kg., which is almost three times the weight of the largest living kangaroos. Probably they moved at slower speeds, since hopping was not possible. They would have moved by striding (walking).[9] The family went extinct about 30,000 years ago.

New Guinea

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New Guinea is the large island close to Australia. It has been divided into Papua New Guinea (Australian administration), and Papua and West Irian (Indonesian province). Because the island was once closer to Australia, they have many related animals and plants in common. They have kangaroos, and a fossil of a giant kangaroo has been found on New Guinea at Nombe rock shelter. It has been named Nombe nombe.[10]

References

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  1. Luo, Z. X.; Yuan, C. X.; Meng, Q. J.; Ji, Q. (25 August 2011). "A Jurassic eutherian mammal and divergence of marsupials and placentals". Nature. 476 (7361): 442–445. Bibcode:2011Natur.476..442L. doi:10.1038/Nature10291. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 21866158. S2CID 205225806.
  2. "Kangaroo vs Emu: FIGHT!". YouTube. 2012.
  3. Yong, Ed (2012). "Kangaroos have three vaginas". discovermagazine.com. Discover Magazine. Archived from the original on October 28, 2015. Retrieved October 22, 2015.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Kangaroos (Department of Environment and Resource Management)". derm.qld.gov.au. 2011. Archived from the original on 2009-11-10. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
  5. Millar, Paul (November 24, 2009). "Rogue roo a fearful combatant in dam attack". The Age. p. 3.
  6. "ANDC - For Schools". anu.edu.au. Retrieved 2 August 2010.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "ANU - Australian National Dictionary Centre - ANDC". anu.edu.au. 2011.
  8. Webb, Jonathan 2014. Giant kangaroos 'walked on two feet'. BBC News Science & Environment. [1]
  9. Janis C.M; Buttrill K & Figueirido B. 2014. Locomotion in extinct giant kangaroos: were Sthenurines hop-less monsters? PLoS ONE. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109888 [2]
  10. Macdonald, Karl 10.6.2022. Newspaper report: "Fossil of giant kangaroo ancestor discovered in Papua New Guinea". "I" newspaper 10.6.22.