The ancestors of kangaroos differentiated from
small, tree-dwelling, possumlike marsupials
fifty million years before the present. About thirty
million years ago, they came down from the trees
of the rain forest that covered most of Australia at
the time. Around five million years ago, the continent
had started to dry out, and species closely related
to modern kangaroos appeared. When the
Aborigines first came to Australia forty thousand
years ago, the continent included some larger
marsupials. The latter apparently were not as fast
and mobile as kangaroos, were easier prey, were
overhunted, and as a result became extinct. The
kangaroos were smaller and swifter, permitting
them to survive. The six living species of true,
large kangaroos differ in their habitats (temperate
woodlands, tropical grasslands, arid outback)
and size; the red kangaroo is the largest, with
some males weighing two hundred pounds and
standing six feet tall; the smallest, the black wallaroo,
can weigh sixty pounds. Smaller relatives of
kangaroos include wallabies (up to sixty pounds),
pademelons (up to fifteen pounds), and rat kangaroos
(less than one pound). While kangaroos are
only found in Australia, some smaller relatives
are also found in New Guinea, which was contiguous
with Australia in the distant past.
Physical Characteristics of Kangaroos
Kangaroos stand on large rear legs, using their
long tail for added support. They have small front
legs, with handlike paws that lack an opposable
thumb. Hopping is their most unusual characteristic.
Besides kangaroos and their relatives, no
vertebrate bigger than ten pounds hops. At slow
speeds, kangaroos walk awkwardly and inefficiently,
using their front legs and tail. However, at
speeds over fifteen miles per hour, they hop upright
in a graceful motion that can be more energetically
efficient than running by quadrupeds,
whose energy use is proportional to their speed.
Kangaroos increase their speed by lengthening
their stride, while keeping their hop frequency
constant, at little increased energy expenditure.
They propel themselves by virtue of highly elastic
legs which move in unison and use their long tails
to provide balance.
As marsupials, kangaroos nurse their young
(called joeys) in a pouch. Female kangaroos, half
the size of males, have one-month gestations,
which can be interrupted if a young is still suckling
in the pouch or under adverse nutritional
conditions. In these cases, the embryo goes into
diapause, a form of "suspended animation", until
hormonal signals permit development to resume.
The newborn is highly immature, pink and naked,
resembles a slug, and weighs less than 0.03
ounces. Using its front legs and a good sense of
smell, it crawls fromthe birth canal into the pouch
and attaches itself to one of four teats of the mammary
gland. Over the next three months, it remains
permanently attached to that teat and becomes
fully developed. Depending on the species,
joeys leave the pouch for the first time at six to ten
months, permanently leave the pouch at eight to
eleven months, and are weaned at eleven to eighteen
months. Females are sexually mature at eighteen
months to two years, although some males
do not become so until they are four years old.
Kangaroos are herbivores, and all six species
are grazing animals. Their teeth are suited to
grasses rather than shrubs and trees. They are also
very efficient in their use of water, making them
suitable for the arid regions of Australia. Some
species consume less than 10 percent the water
sheep do under the same conditions. When temperatures
are moderate, they can get all of their
water from the plants that they eat. They are inactive
in the heat of the day and cool themselves by
panting, sweating, and licking; the latter refers to
the fact that they cover their front legs with saliva,
which by evaporation cools not only their extremities
but also their bodies via a dense network of
blood vessels close to the surface. Kangaroos are
among the most heat-tolerant of mammals. In addition,
they have large, padded feet that compact
the soil less than domesticated livestock.
Future of Kangaroos
Totaling over twenty million, the six species of
large kangaroos are not presently endangered. This
is in contrast with the risk to survival faced bysome
wallabies and smaller marsupials that are preyed
upon by introduced wild animals, such as foxes,
or by feral cats. The habitats of most kangaroos
have been reduced by human activities, housing,
industry, and agriculture, although the range of
some of the less arid-tolerant species (eastern
gray and western gray) has been increased
when water is provided for livestock
in remote regions. In addition, areas
where sheep are protected from dingoes,
as with the patrolled fence that stretches
across Australia, have increased numbers
of kangaroos. While they do compete with
sheep and cattle for food and water, the
extent of competition is limited, except
during drought. Farming kangaroos for
meat and hides remains a possibility but
has not been developed. Some extensive
preserves would be desirable not only to
display these large animals in their natural
environment but also to conserve their
smaller, endangered relatives.
Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Bilateria
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Marsupialia
Family: Macropodidae (kangaroos and wallabies)
Genus and species: Macropus, with fourteen species including
M. giganteus (eastern gray kangaroo), M. fuliginosus
(western gray kangaroo), M. rufus (red kangaroo),
M. robustus (wallaroo, four subspecies), M. bernardus
(black wallaroo), M. antilopinus (antilopine kangaroo)
Geographical location: Australia
Habitat: Grasslands
Gestational period: One month, followed by six to eleven
months in marsupium
Life span: Twelve to eighteen years in the wild; twentyeight
years in captivity
Special anatomy: Hops instead of running, by virtue of
elastic legs and large tail for balance; gives birth to
highly immature young that nurse and develop in a
pouch
Copyright © 2014 Animalia Life | All rights reserved