About Kangaroos

 

The ‘About Kangaroos’ page is the story of kangaroos - their history, their social structure, their behaviour, the different subspecies and their contribution to the survival of Australia and its unique wildlife.

Kangaroos are a keystone species who play a prominent role in the regeneration of the Australian bush and are responsible for the survival of other species of native wildlife like the koala. Their migratory paths crisscross Australia with no adherence to human enforced boundaries. Aborigines have co-existed with kangaroos for 60,000 years. Over the last 200 years, white colonial Australia have decimated kangaroo mobs and populations, cleared millions of acres of native bush and put up 1000s of kilometres of exclusion and cluster fencing.

 

The About Kangaroos Page has the history of kangaroos, the social structure of Kangaroos and the types of kangaroos. The History of Kangaroos is told from the Aboriginal, Biological, Colonial, Ecological and Individual point of view.

The History of Kangaroos

Kangaroo have been in Australia for over 16 million years. They and the Australian bush are uniquely connected. Kangaroos regenerate the bush and eat native grasses. They are one of the few species who control their own breeding. They don’t need to be ‘managed’ by humans because they will limit their own populations to suit the environment and conditions.

The MOBs & their social structure

Sentient Beings: Kangaroos are intelligent, gentle animals who live in close family groups sometimes referred to as ‘mobs’. All kangaroos feel great grief for the loss of mob members. They feel pain and fear. They are sentient beings. Mobs are, in general, small. They have a fascinating matriarchal society and very complex in structure. They have a rich emotional and social life. The MOB has it’s migratory pathways that it knows well and goes back to time and time again. The older males and alpha females teach the younger kangaroos everything they need to know.

Oldest/Largest Male: The ‘alpha’ male is the main protector of the mob. When danger approaches he stands up tall, and stares out the ‘enemy’. He is the first to be killed for this reason. The killing of the alpha and older males and females reeks havoc in the mob structure. They are a highly sensitive complex species.

Females and their joeys: The females have a very close bond with in-pouch and on-foot joeys. A female kangaroo can only have ONE baby a year. Over her lifetime, a female kangaroo is lucky to have two joeys survive to become adults.

If a female gives birth to a female, she will stay with her mother forever; females will always stay in their matriarchal blood lines. The female joey, once out of the pouch, is drinking from the pouch that her sibling is developing in. Not only is the mother kangaroo in constant contact with their new-born, but so is the female at-foot joey. If the females get separated; they will become solitary. Males will stay with their mothers until they are 3 to 4 years of age, and then go and find their own mob away from the genetic lines of their mother.

Carers Story: Kangaroos are an Australian National icon but that does not protect them. Kangaroo mobs are suffering at the moment from forced migration, whereby their land is subsumed by humans for housing or industry and they are forced to migrate to a new area, sometimes joining up with a neighbouring mob. This is not natural behaviour. No one owns them and no one has the right to kill these intelligent animals who are just trying to survive. Not only are these beautiful animals chased down, terrified and then shot by supposedly crack shot killers - who leave the poor animals writing in agony - but also their pouch young are ripped from them and have their heads smashed in with rocks, or on bull bars or have their throats cut! Those at foot joeys who are not shot are left - terrified - to watch their mothers murdered, to starve to death or to be attacked and killed by predators! They live in a constant war zone. The only reason anyone would be involved in this cruel, vile and barbaric so - called ‘industry’ is to make money. These animals do no harm... they deserve to live in peace.

Types of Kangaroos

Kangaroos belong to the Macropodidae family. These include the Red Kangaroo (Macropus rufus), Eastern Grey Kangaroo (M. giganteus), Western Grey Kangaroo (M. fuliginosus), Antilopine Kangaroo (M. antilopinus), Common Wallaroo (or Euro) (M. robustus) and the Black Wallaroo (M. bernadus) - see the Meet the Mob page