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Kangaroo Info.

As a follow up to yesterday's post I thought that you might like to know that:
The word kangaroo comes from the aboriginal word
gangurru meaning Grey kangaroo.
Males are called bucks, jacks or boomers, while females are named does, jills or flyers.
Babies are referred to as
joeys.A group of kangaroos is called a mob, a troop or a court.
Eastern Grey and her JoeyKangaroos belong to the large family of
macropods - meaning
giant footedMy kangaroos are
Eastern Greys. The largest is the Red kangaroo which can stand at 6-7 feet and weigh 200lb.
There are over 60 species of kangaroos, the smaller ones you may be familiar with are called wallabies.
The early explorers said of the kangaroo:
"He has a head like a deer (without antlers)
stands upright like a man
and hops like a frog."
He can hop over short distances at 70kmph, (44 mph), and over a 2km distance the kangaroo can travel at 40 kmph, (25mph).
He lives 4-6 years and is a strict herbivore, many are nocturnal.
The huge tail has three functions:
- for balance when hopping
- as a third tripod leg when sitting
- and as a 5th limb when moving slowly
A kangaroo neonate
The kangaroo is a marsupial - the female has a pouch. The fascinating thing about marsupials is that the female has two lateral vaginas and a third birthing canal! The male has a two pronged penis which inseminates the female through the two vaginas which lead to two uteruses.
The female can be permanently pregnant, except the day she gives birth. The embryo develops for only 33 days before being born and making the great walk to the pouch - which actually only takes about three minutes.
The kangaroo baby is born blind, hairless and only a few cms long. His back limbs are just buds but his stronger front limbs allow him to climb through the furry abdomen of the mother up to the pouch where he latches on to one of the four teats and begins feeding. The mother can produce two different types of milk. One for a newborn and the other to suit a bouncing young joey. The young can inhabit the pouch together.
After 190 days the neonate has become a little joey and can leave the pouch.
And after 235 days Mother kicks him out for good! Farewell Skippy...

The
Skippy TV series was made in Australia between 1966-1968. The segments were filmed in colour, to increase marketability, even though Australian TV was black and white until 1975.
The series aired in the US and was also dubbed into Spanish and shown in spanish speaking countries.
Oh, and that clicking noise that Skippy made:
"thck,thck,thck" is not made by kangaroos.
Information from Wikipedia*