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Tag: Visual edit
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<nowiki>{{short description|Marsupial of the family Macropodidae indigenous to Australia}}</nowiki>
{{tocright}}
 
== (0 - 9) ==
 
   
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<nowiki>{{About|the animal|the kangaroo as a food|Kangaroo meat|other meanings|Kangaroo (disambiguation)}}</nowiki>
* [[60 Day Wonder]] (DNA Genetics): Williams Wonder x Ruderalis
 
* [[8 Ball Kush]] (Barney's Farm Seeds): Afghanistan / Pakistan
 
   
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<nowiki>{{pp-move-indef}}</nowiki>
== (A) ==
 
   
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<nowiki>{{pp-semi-indef}}</nowiki>
* [[A-K]] (BC Seed Co.): Afghani #1 X Hindu Kush
 
* [[A-Train]] (TH Seeds): Arcata Trainwreck x Mazar-i-Sharif Afghan
 
* [[Acapulco Gold]] (Dr. Greenthumb): Landraces; Mexico, Acapulco
 
* [[Afghan Delight]] (Soma): Afghani Skunk X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* [[Afghani]]: Landraces; Afghanistan.
 
* [[Afghani Special]] (KC Brains): Afghani X Double Afghani
 
* [[Afghanica]] (Flying Dutchmen): Afghani #1 X Original Skunk
 
* [[Afghooey]] (Clone only): Afghani #1 x Maui Haze
 
* [[Agent Orange]] (TGA Subcool Seeds): Orange Velvet x Jack the Ripper.
 
* [[AK-47]] (Serious): Colombian X Mexican X Thai X Afghani
 
* [[AK-48]] (Nirvana Seed Bank): Ice (f) x Jock Horror (m)
 
* [[Alaskan Ice]] (Green House Seed Co.): White Widow (f) x Haze (m)
 
* Alien OG Kush (Cali Connection) Tahoe OG X Alien Technology (m)
 
* [[Ambrosia]] (Jordan of the Island): God Bud X Burmese
 
* [[Americano]] (Entreprise): Skunk X Northern Light
 
* [[Amethyst Bud]] (Soma Seeds): Lavender Bud x Afghani Hawaiian
 
* [[Amnesia Haze]] (Soma): Afghani Hawaiian x Laotian x Thai x Jamaican Haze
 
* [[Amnesia Lemon]] (Barney's Farm): Skunk No. 1 x Amnesia Haze
 
* [[AMS]] (Green House Seed Co.): Swiss Sativa X Swiss Indica
 
* [[Apollo 11]] (Brothers Grimm): Genius X Cinderella 99
 
* [[Apollo 13]] (Brothers Grimm): Genius X Princess 88
 
* [[Apollo Mist]] (Reservoir): Apollo 11 x 1998 Pre-Sensi Kali Mist Mother
 
* [[Apple Pie]] (Reeferman Seeds): Acapulco Gold X Highland Nepalese
 
* [[Arjan's Haze No. 1]] (Green House Seed Co.): Neville's Haze x G-13
 
* [[Arjan's Haze No. 2]] (Green House Seed Co.): Neville’s Haze X unknown Laotian
 
* [[Arjan's Haze No. 3]] (Green House Seed Co.): Neville's Haze x Super Silver Haze x unknown Laotian
 
* [[Arjan's Strawberry Haze]] (Green House Seed Co.): Swiss Sativa x NL5 Haze Mist
 
* [[Arjan's Ultra Haze No. 1]] (Green House Seed Co.): Neville's Haze, Cambodian, Laotian
 
* [[Arjan's Ultra Haze No. 2]] (Green House Seed Co.): Neville`s Haze, Mango Haze, Laotian
 
* [[Asian Fantasy]]: (unknown)
 
* [[Astroboy]] (TGA Subcool Seeds): Apollo 13 X [Ortega X Cinderella 99]
 
* Aurora (SickMeds): Northenr Lights x Magic Marlin
 
* [[Aurora Borealis]] (Flying Dutchmen): Northern Lights No. 10 X Skunk No. 1
 
* [[Aurora Indica]] (Nirvana): Afghani X Northern Lights
 
* [[Australian Blue]] (Homegrown Fantaseeds): Australian Duck X Blue Haze
 
* [[Avalon]] (Next Generation): Afghani X Blueberry
 
   
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<nowiki>{{Use Australian English|date=August 2015}}</nowiki>
== (B) ==
 
   
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<nowiki>{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}</nowiki>
* [[B-52]] (Nirvana): Big Bud X Skunk
 
* [[B-52 Bomber]] (Almighty Seeds): White Widow X Lionheart
 
* [[Bahia Black Head]] (KC Brains): Brazil (landrace) X KC 606
 
* [[Baked Alaska]] (Juan Moore Seeds): Peak 19 X Tangerine
 
* [[Baldy]] (BC Seed Co.): Big Bud X Northern Light #5
 
* BC Big Bang (Next Generation): BC Big Bud X Dynamite
 
* [[BC Big Bud]] (Jordan of the Islands): Big Bud x unknown Sativa.
 
* BC Biker Bud (THC Seeds): Afghani X Northern Light X White Widow
 
* BC Blue #1 (THC Seeds): Blueberry X Blueberry X BC Biker Bud
 
* [[BC Blueberry]] (BC Bud Depot): unknown Blueberry clone
 
* [[BC God Bud]] (BC Bud Depot): God X Hawaiian X Purple Indica
 
* BC Purple Star (BC Bud Depot): Purple Star X BC Purple Indica
 
* [[BC Sweet God]] (BC Bud Depot): BC God Bud X BC Sweet Tooth
 
* [[BC Sweet Tooth]] (BC Bud Depot): An advancement of Sweet Tooth #3
 
* BC Timewarp Chemo (Woodhorse): Timewarp X Citrus X BC Chemo
 
* [[Beatrix Choice]] (SSSC): [Afghani x South African] X Acapulco Gold
 
* Beauty and the Beast (BCGA): Chemo X Cinderella 99
 
* Belizean Sativa (Reeferman): Landraces, Belize
 
* Bella Ciao (Tiki): Northern Lights X ??
 
* [[Belladonna]] (Paradise): Superskunk X F1 unknown Sativa
 
* Berry Blaster (Motarebel): Blueberry Afghani X Cherry Bomb II
 
* Berry Bolt (Motarebel): G-Bolt X Bubbleberry
 
* Berry Bud (Motarebel): Afghani X Firecracker
 
* Berry Kush (Motarebel): Bubbleberry X [Bubba Kush X Yumbolt]
 
* [[Betazoid]] (Enterprise): Grapefruit X Northern Light X African Sativa
 
* [[Biddy Early]] (Magus Genetics): Early Skunk F2 X Warlock
 
* [[Biddy's Sister]] (Magus Genetics): Early Skunk x Sensi Star
 
* [[Big Bang]] (Greenhouse Seed Co.): Skunk X Northern Light X El Nino
 
* Big Blue (BC Seed Co.): Northern Light #5 X Blueberry
 
* Big Bud (SSSC): [Big Bud cutting X Northern Lights #1] X Big Bud cutting
 
* Big Bud (Nirvana): Afghani X Skunk #1
 
* Big Buddha Blue Cheese (Big Buddha): Big Buddha Cheese X Blueberry
 
* [[Big Buddha Cheese]] (Big Buddha): (Afghani X Cheese) X Original UK Cheese
 
* Big Funk (Legends): [Skunk X Big Bud] X ??
 
* Big Gun (Capricorn): AK-47 X Matanuska Tundra
 
* [[Big Haze]] (Crazy x Seeds): F1 Original Haze x Chronic
 
* Big Mac (Federation): BC Big Bud X Mikado
 
* Big Thunder (Reeferman): a Humbolt strain X Kodiak Gold
 
* Big Treat (Breeder Steve): Dutch Treat X Big Skunk
 
* Big White (Sannie's Seeds): Powerplant x Chronic
 
* Bitchin Blue (Motarebel): BlueMoonshine X Killa Queen
 
* [[Bizarre]] (SickMeds): Double Sour Diesel x {Black Rose x (Black Rose x Double Purple Doja)}
 
* Black Cherry (Subcool): Cherry DannyBoy X Black Russian
 
* [[Black Domina]] (Sensi): Ortega X Afghani X Hashplant X Northern Lights
 
* Black Gold (Dman): Columbian Gold X [G13 x Black Widow]
 
* Black Ice (Motarebel): Black Domina X Ice
 
* Black Kat (Motarebel): [G13 X Black Widow] X FireCracker
 
* Black Mamba (Blue Grass): Black Domina X Blue Bubblejuice
 
* Black Spice (Dman): Silver Spice X G13 X Black Widow
 
* [[Black Russian]] (Delicious Seeds): White Russian x Black Domina
 
* [[Black Widow]] (Mr. Nice): Brazilian Sativa X South Indian Hybrid
 
* BLACK ZOMBIE (Lineage Genetics) zombie virus x black domina
 
* [[Blackberry]] (Indica)
 
* Blackberry Kush
 
* Blacktooth (Krip Keeper)
 
* [[Blockhead]] (Spice of Life Seeds)
 
* Blonde Widow (Motarebel): Strawberry Blonde X Aloha 98 White Widow
 
* BlooTooth (SickMeds): Sweet Tooth x Bloo Goo
 
* Blue Alaskan fem. (Reeferman): Matanuska Thunderf**k X Blueberry Sativa
 
* Blue Apollo (Joey Weed): Blueberry X Apollo 11
 
* Blue Bubblejuice (Blue Grass): Bubblejuice X Blueberry
 
* Blue Candy (Mr. Blue): Blue Skunk X Cotton Candy
 
* [[Blue Cheese]] (Big Buddha): Orig. UK Cheese X Blueberry
 
* Blue Crystal (World Wide Seeds): White Heaven X Blueberry
 
* Blue Diesel (?): [Blueberry x Nepalese Kush] x NYC Diesel
 
* Blue Dragon Blueberry x Sour Diesel
 
* [[Blue Dream]] (Blueberry x Super Silver Haze)
 
* Blue Dynamite (Next Generation): ??Blueberry X Dynamite??
 
* [[Blue God]] (Jordan of the Island): Blueberry X God Bud
 
* Blue Goo (Blue Grass) Blue BubbleJuice X Double G
 
* [[Blue Grape No. 1]] (Electric Seed Co.) Grapefruit X Blueberry
 
* Blue Hash (Grassroots Rx): Blueberry X California Hashplant
 
* [[Blue Haze]] (Homegrown Fantaseeds) Haze x Blueberry
 
* [[Blue Hen]] (Blue Grass) Blueberry X Silver Haze(R)
 
* Blue Hun (Blue Grass) Blue Hen X Blue Russian
 
* Blue Jack (Reeferman) Blueberry X Jack Herer X Northern Lights #5
 
* Blue Jamaican (Blue Grass) Marley’s Collie X Blue Russian
 
* Blue Kiev (Blue Grass) Blue Russian X AK-47
 
* Blue Kronic (Motarebel) [BlueMoonshine X Killa Queen] X Black Kat
 
* Blue Magoo DJ Short BB X Major League Bud
 
* Blue Moon Rocks (BOG) Blue Moon X BogBubble
 
* Blue Mystic (Nirvana) Blueberry X Skunk
 
* Blue Nepalese (Reeferman) Nepalese Sativa X Blueberry Sativa
 
* Blue Pearl (Homegrown Fantaseeds) Silver Pearl X Blue Haze
 
* Blue Rocket (Blue Grass) Blue Rocker X Blue Bubblejuice
 
* Blue Russian (Blue Grass) Blue Hen X Juicy Russian
 
* [[Blue Satellite]]
 
* Blue Skunk X (Mr. Blue) Blueberry X Skunk
 
* Blue Thunder (Sagarmatha) Blueberry X Matanuska Tundra
 
* Blue Thunder (Reeferman) Blueberry Sativa X Kodiak Lavender
 
* [[Blue Widow]] (NCGA) Blueberry X Aloha White Widow
 
* [[Blue Wreck]] Blueberry and Train Wreck
 
* [[Blueberry]] (DJ Short): Purple Thai x Afghani
 
* [[Blueberry (Sativa)]] (DJ Short): [Oaxacan Gold X Chocolate Thai] X Highland Thai X Afghani
 
* Blueberry Blast (Reeferman) Northern Lights #5 X Blueberry Indica
 
* [[Blueberry Haze]] (DNA) Dj Short Blueberry X KC Brains Haze Special
 
* [[Blueberry Kush]] (Indica)
 
* Blueberry Magic (Reeferman) Magic Carpet Ride X Blueberry Sativa
 
* Blueberry NL (Dr. Atomic) Blueberry X Northern Lights
 
* Blueberry Punch (Next Generation) Blueberry X Romulan
 
* Bluebottle (?Xbx?) (SuperSkunk X BubbleGum Indica) X Blueberry Sativa
 
* Bluez Cluez (Juan Moore) Blue Widow X Tangerine
 
* Bogglegum (BOG) Northern Lights #5 X Bubblegum
 
* Bomber’s Widow (Motarebel) [G-13 X Black Widow] X Cherry Bomb II
 
* Bora Lights (GrassrootsRx): Tora Bora x Northern Lights
 
* Bottle Rocket (Reservoir) Killer Queen X DTC 99
 
* Brains Choice (KC Brains) Jamaica Lambsbread 94 X ?Leda Uno 96? X White Widow
 
* Brains Damage (KC Brains) Mexico, Acapulco X [Hawaii 93 X Mango 2001 X KC 36 606]
 
* Brains Escape (KC Brains) Edelwuiss X [Brazil, Salvador X KC 606]
 
* Brainwreck (HighGrade) Trainwreck X White Widow
 
* Brazil KC (KC Brains) Mango Vermelho, Paranaiba X K.C. 606
 
* Brazilian Gold (Brazilian Seed) Landraces; Brazil
 
* Brazilian Haze (Brazilian Seed Company) Haze X Brazilian Khola
 
* Brazilian Lemon (Brazilian Seed Company) Mango Rosa X “a Secret Strain”
 
* Brazilian Skunk (Brazilian Seed Company) Original Green X Early Chemo
 
* Bronze Whaler (MJOZ) Bronze Whaler X Skunk #1
 
* Bubba Berry (?): Bubba Kush x Blackberry
 
* [[Bubba Kush]] (Dr. Green Thumb
 
* [[Bubble Gum]]
 
* Bubble Goo (SickMeds): Indiana Bubble Gum x Bloo Goo
 
* [[Bubble Wreck]] Bubble Gum x Trainwreck
 
* Bubbleberry: (Dman) Blueberry X Bubblegum
 
* Bubbleberry: (Sagarmatha) Bubblegum X Blueberry
 
* Bubblefunk: (BC Seed Co.) Bubbleberry X Northern Light #5
 
* Bubblejuice: (Blue Grass) Juicy Fruit X Bubblegum
 
* Bud Bunnie: (White Widow Web) White Widow X Super Skunk
 
* Buddha: (Dutch Passion) [Oasis X Shiva X Haze] X [Oasis X Shiva X Skunk]
 
* [[Buddha's Sister]]: (Soma Seeds) Reclining Buddha X Afghani-Hawaiian
 
* [[Builder]]
 
* Burmaberry: (Reeferman) Shishkaberry #3 X Burmese
 
* Burmese Pure: (Reeferman) Landraces; Highland Burma
 
* BushDoctor: (??) Airborne G13 X [Malawi X Jamaican]
 
* Bushmans: (Herbaria) South African Sativa, Ciskei
 
* [[Butterscotch Hawaiian]]: (Reeferman) a Hawaiian X Butterscotch Afghan
 
   
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<nowiki>{{</nowiki>Automatic taxobox
== (C) ==
 
   
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| name = Kangaroo
* C-99 {see Cinderella 99}
 
* [[C-Plus]] (Chimera & DJ Short): California Orange X DJ's Blueberry
 
* [[C4 (cannabis)|C4]] (Chimera): Cotton Candy X Shishkaberry
 
* [[Cali Miss]] (BC Seed Co.): Haze X Five-O
 
* California Grapefruit (DNA): [Northern Lights No. 1 x Californian Skunk No. 1 (90's)] X Californian Afghani (80's)
 
* [[California Orange]]
 
* California Special (KC Brains): American California X Skunk
 
* [[Calizahr]] (Chimera Seeds): California Orange X Shiskaberry
 
* Calvin (BlueHemp): California Orange X Landraces, Lebanese X Swiss Sativa
 
* Calyxxx (Almighty): Grapefruit X Friesland X an old-school Humboldt
 
* Canadian Classic (Reeferman): Grapefruit X Burmese
 
* Candy Cane Brain (Shadow Seed): Silver Shadow X Grapefruit
 
* Candy Jack (Jack Herer X Cotton Candy)
 
* Canela (A.C.E): Indian Malana X Jamaican Blue Mountain 1984
 
* [[Canna Sutra]] (Delta 9 Labs): Reclining Buddha X Sensi Star
 
* [[Cannalope Haze]] (DNA Genetics): Haze x Landraces; Mexico, Michoacán
 
* [[Cannatonic]] (Resin Seeds): MK Ultra (f) x G 13 Haze (m)
 
* Capricho (Canna Biogen): Manali X Colombian
 
* Caribe (Canna Biogen): Jamaica X [Jamaica X [Northern Light #5 X Haze]]
 
* Celestial Temple Sativa (Federation): Landraces; Ecuador, Andes Mountains
 
* [[Ceres Hilton]] (Harvestmen): Amnesia No. 1 x (Super Silver Haze/Jack Herer)
 
* Champagne (Reeferman): [Hashplant X Hindu Kush] X Burmese
 
* [[Cheese]]
 
* [[Cheese (Homegrown Fantaseeds)|Cheese]] (Homegrown Fantaseeds): Exodus Cheese x Big Buddha Cheese
 
* [[Cheese Quake]] (TGA Subcool Seeds) {Indica dominant}: Exodus Cheese x Querkle
 
* Chemo Grizzly (Kootenay Mountain): 2 differents Chemo
 
* Chemota Dragon (Motarebel): UBC Chemo X Killa Queen
 
* Cherry Berry (Reeferman): Cherry Bomb X Blueberry Indica
 
* Cherry Bomb (Almighty): Lionheart X Sage
 
* Cherry Bomb #2 (Prairiefire): M-80 Cherry Bomb from Northern California X C. B. from Southern Kentucky
 
* Cherry Kush ( ? ) Purple Afghani X O.G. Kush
 
* Cherry Thai (Reeferman): Cherry Bomb X Oregon Purple Thai
 
* Cherry Pie (FRISCO NATIVES): F1-Derb  X  purple x cookies
 
* Chewing (BlueHemp): Double Gum X Swiss Sativa
 
* Chilla (BlueHemp): Kush X Nepali
 
* China White (Reeferman): Chinese Indica X Nepalese Indica
 
* Chinese Indica (Reeferman): Landraces; SouthWest China, Yunnan
 
* Chitral (Dutch Passion): Chitral-Hasj X Skunk
 
* Chocolate Chunk (ThSeeds): Afghan X S.A.G.E.
 
* [[Chocolope]] (DNA Genetics): Chocolate Thai x Cannalope
 
* Chronic (Serious): Northern Light X [Skunk X Northern Light] X AK47
 
* Chronicle (BlueHemp): Chronic X Lebanese X Swiss Sativa
 
* Chrystal (Nirvana): [White Widow X Northern Lights] X Northern Lights
 
* [[Chupacabra]] (SickMeds): The Wreck IBL x Strawberry Fire
 
* Church, the (Greenhouse): Swiss Sativa X SuperSkunk X Skunk X Northern Light
 
* [[Cinderella 88]] (Brothers Grimm): Princess x P. 75
 
* [[Cinderella 99]] (Brothers Grimm): Princess x Cinderella 88
 
* Cinderella Blues (Spice Brothers): Blueberry Sativa X Cinderella 99
 
* Cindy Princess (Spice Brothers): Cinderella 99 X Ice Princess
 
* Cinnamon (Female Seeds): Jack Herer X ??
 
* Citral (Nirvana): Hindu Kush X ??
 
* Citralah (Soma): Landraces; Pakistan, Chittral X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* Citrus Skunk (Jordan of the Island): Skunk #1 X California Orange
 
* City Slicker (Motarebel): Pacific G13 X NYC Diesel
 
* Cloud No. 7 (Herbaria): Afghan X South African
 
* [[Cold Creek Kush]] (T.H. Seeds): Master Kush x Chem 91
 
* [[Santa Marta Colombian Gold|Colombian Gold]]: Landraces; Colombia
 
* Colombian Haze (Brazilian Seed): Colombian Gold X Haze Special
 
* Colombian Jack (Brazilian Seed Company): Colombian Gold X Jack Herer
 
* [[Confidential Cheese]] (DNA Genetics) {Indica dominant}: L.A. Confidential x Exodus Cheese
 
* Congo “aka Bangi” (A.C.E.): [Congolese X Congolese] X [Chitral X Chitral X Chitral]
 
* [[Connie Chung (cannabis)]] (DNA Genetics) {Indica dominant}: L.A. Confidential x G-13 Haze.
 
* Conquistador (Subcool): Hashplant X Ortega X Cinderella 99
 
* Continental (A.C.E): Caribbean X Congolese X Pakistani
 
* Cotton Candy (Federation): Afghani X Blueberry
 
* Couchlock (BC Seed Co.): Northern Lights #5 X Afghani #1
 
* Crazy Daze (Dman): Red Haze X [G13 x Black Widow]
 
* [[Crimea Blue]] (Barney's Farm): Ukranian Hash Plant x Blueberry
 
* Cripple Creek (Tom Hill): Pine Tar Kush X Deep Chunk
 
* Critical Hash 47 (Spice Brothers): [Hashplant x Critical Mass] X AK-47
 
* Critical Mass (Mr. Nice): Afghani X Skunk #1
 
* Crown Royal (Federation): Hawaiian Sativa X Mikado
 
* Crystal (Nirvana): White Widow X Northern Lights
 
* Crystal Lightning (White Widow Web): White Widow X Super Thai
 
* Crystal Limit (KC Brains): Crystal X KC 606
 
* Crystal Paradise (KC Brains): Californian BigBud Skunk X Brazil (Mango Vermelho from Brazil, Paranaiba)
 
* Crystal Ship, the (Reeferman): Kali Mist X Kodiak Gold
 
* Crystalberry (Cannabis Pros): Blueberry X Northern Light #5
 
* Cujo (Motarebel): Dogbite X Killa Queen
 
   
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<nowiki>|</nowiki> fossil_range = Early <nowiki>[[Miocene]] – Present</nowiki>
== (D) ==
 
   
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| image = Kangaroo Australia 01 11 2008 - retouch.JPG
* [[Da Bomb]] (Dman Seeds): [G13 x Black Widow] x Cinderella 99
 
* [[Daddy's Girl]] (Kiwiseeds): Landraces; South Africa x unknown
 
* [[Dagga]] (Cannabis Professionals) {Sativa}: Landraces; South Africa, East Coast
 
* [[Dankee Doodle]] (KC Brains): [Viking 90 X Big Buds 93] X KC 636
 
* [[Dannyboy]] (TGA Subcool Seeds): Killer Queen x {Ortega x C-99}
 
* Dark Kush (BlueHemp): Landraces, Hindu Kush Mountains
 
* Dark Vader (BlueHemp): Kush X [Kush X Afghani]
 
* [[De La Haze]] (Paradise Seeds): Mango Haze x California Lemon Skunk
 
* [[Deadhead OG]] (Cali Connection): '91 Chemdawg x SFV OGK F4
 
* Death Star (Ohio): Sensi Star x East Coast Sour Diesel
 
* Delta 9 (Dutch Passion): Isis X Flo
 
* Deep Chunk (Tom Hills): Afghanistan IBL
 
* Desert Queen (No Mercy): Sudden Death # Master Ice X Everest Queen # WK
 
* Dess*Tar (Dynasty):  Starship x Kali Myst
 
* Destroyer (Canna Biogen): Meao Thai X [Mexican X Colombian]
 
* Devil (Mr. Nice): Afghan X [Afghan X Skunk]
 
* Diablo (Next Generation): Blueberry X Grapefruit X South African Sativa
 
* Diamond Head (Sagarmatha): Flow X Atypical Flow
 
* [[Diesel]] (Weasel): '91 Chem Dawg x (Super Skunk x Sensi's Northern Lights)
 
* Diesel 39 (Reservoir): M-39 X Sour Diesel
 
* Dirty Harry (Motarebel): Grapefruit Bx1 X Herijuana
 
* Diva G (Tuktuk): G13 X Cali Sat
 
* Dixie Chicken (Juan Moore): Jacks Cleaner X Airbornes G13
 
* Dixie Crystals (Juan Moore): Aloha 98 White Widow X Cinderella 99
 
* Doc Chronic (Reeferman): Fraser Valley Sativa Hashplant X California Indica
 
* Doctor, the (Greenhouse): Great White Shark X South Indian X SuperSkunk
 
* [[Dog Shit]]
 
* Dolce Vita (Dutch Passion): Isis X Power Plant
 
* [[Dominator]] (Karma Genetics): Kushage x Jack Herer
 
* Dope, the (AAA Seeds): Northern Lights #5 X Haze
 
* Double Dutch (Magus): pre-2000 Chronic X Warlock
 
* Double Dutch Haze Skunk (Fleur du Mal): Dutch Haze SkunkX [Haze #19 X Skunk #1]
 
* Double Purple Doja (Subcool): Sputnik 1.0 X Black Russian
 
* [[Dr. Grinspoon (cannabis)|Dr. Grinspoon]] (Barney's Farm) {Heirloom Genetics}
 
* DTC 99 (Spice Brothers): Durban Thai Highflyer X Cinderella 99
 
* Ducksfoot (WallyDuck): Ducksfoot X Sativa backcrossed to 97% ducksfoot
 
* [[Dumpster]]
 
* [[Durban Poison]] (Sensi / Dutch Passion): Landraces; South Africa, Durban
 
* Durban Poison (Nirvana): South African Sativa X Skunk
 
* Durban Red (Effettoserra): Landraces; Durban X Purple Widow
 
* Durban Thai Highflier (SSSC): Thai X Durban Poison
 
* Durga Mata (Paradise): Shiva X Shiva
 
* Dutch Dragon (Paradise): [Durban X Skunk] X California Indica
 
* [[Dynamite]]: (Next Generation Seeds):
 
   
  +
<nowiki>|</nowiki> image_caption = A female <nowiki>[[red kangaroo]]</nowiki>
== (E) ==
 
   
  +
| taxon = Macropodidae
* Early Brambleberry: (Patch Works) Early Bramble X Purple Pineberry
 
* Early Chemo: (Brazilian Seed Company) Early Girl X UBC Chemo
 
* [[Early Girl]]: (Cultivator's Choice) Afghani X Mexican Sativa
 
* Early Green: (Brazilian Seed Company) Early Green X Original Green
 
* [[Early Misty]]: (Nirvana Seeds) {Indica dominant} Misty x Skunk
 
* [[Early Queen]]: (Mr. Nice) early Californian blends X Mexican Sativa
 
* [[Early Sativa]]: (Great White North Seeds)
 
* [[Early Skunk]]: (Sensi Seeds) Skunk #1 X Early Pearl
 
* Early White: (Effettoserra) Northern Lights “early genotype” X White Special “early genotype”
 
* [[Eclipse]]: (Homegrown Fantaseeds) {Sativa dominant} Bubblegum 95 x Hindu Kush #12
 
* [[El Niño]]: (Green House Seeds) [Haze X Super Skunk] X [Brazilian X South Indian]
 
* El Peru: (Blue Grass) El Nino X Peruvian Skunk
 
* [[Electric Haze]]: (British Columbia Seed Co.) Original Haze x Five-O
 
* [[Elvis PressedMe]]: (Celebrity) Chitral X Skunk
 
* [[Ethiopian Highland]]: (African Seeds) Landraces; Ethiopian Highland
 
* [[Euforia]]: (Dutch Passion) a selected Skunk X a selected Skunk
 
* [[Everest Queen]]: (No Mercy) K-2 X Shiva Special
 
* [[Exile]]: (Magus Genetics) Warlock X [Northern Lights X White Widow]
 
* [[Exodus Cheese]]: (Green House Seeds) - a selected Skunk No. 1 strain
 
   
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<nowiki>| authority = [[John Edward Gray|Gray]], 1821</nowiki>
== (F) ==
 
   
  +
<nowiki>}}</nowiki>
* [[F-13]] (DJ Short Seeds): Flo x Blueberry
 
* [[F'n Blue]] (Vancouver Island Seed Co.): Blueberry x Fucking Incredible
 
* [[Fast Freddy]] (British Columbia Seed Co.): Early Pearl x Northern Lights No. 5
 
* [[Fig Widow Queen]] (Dutch Flowers): Fig Widow X Cinderella 99
 
* [[Fighting Buddha]] (Chimera & DJ Short): Burmese X Blueberry
 
* [[First Lady]] (Sensi Seed Bank): Afghani x Ortega
 
* Firecracker (SickMeds): Green Crack x Strawberry Fire
 
* [[Five-O]] (BC Seed Co.): Hawaiian Indica X Northern Lights #5
 
* [[Flo]] (DJ Short): Purple Thai X Afghani
 
* [[FourPlay]] (Head Seeds): [Cinderella 99 X Apollo 11] X [New York City Diesel X G-13]
 
* [[Free Tibet]] (Soma Seeds): Nepalese Hash Plant X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* [[Fruit Bowl]] (Sunshine Seeds): Purple Maui X Sweet Tooth No. 3
 
* [[Fruity Juice]] (Sensi Seed Bank): Thai landrace {Sativa} X unknown Indica
 
* [[Fruity Thai]] (Ceres): Thai Sativa X Dutch Indica
 
* Fucking Incredible (Vancouver Island Seed Co.) Burmese X Afghani
 
* [[Fumar Con Dios]] (Flying Dutchmen): Original Haze X Skunk #1
 
   
== (G) ==
 
   
* [[G-Bolt]] (Motarebel) Pacific G-13 X Yumboldt
 
* [[G-13]]
 
* G-13 Blue Widow (NCGA) [Blaze x G-13 x Northern Lights] X Blue Widow or G-13 X Blue Widow
 
* G-13 Diesel (Head Seeds) G-13bx X Rezdog’s East Coast Sour Diesel v3
 
* [[G-13 Haze]] (Barney's Farm): G-13 x Hawaiian Sativa
 
* [[General's Daughter]] (Fleur du Mal) [G-13 X Northern Lights] X Cinderella 99
 
* Ghandi (High Quality) South Indian X Skunk
 
* Ghaze Bx1 (Dutch Flowers) [G-13 X Uber Candy Haze] X G-13
 
* Ghost (Reeferman) Burmese X Kali Mist
 
* Giant Cindy (Spice Brothers) Green Giant X Cinderella 99
 
* Giant Princess (Spice Brothers) Green Giant X Ice Princess
 
* Girl Scout Cookies (FRISCO NATIVES): [F-1 Durban X Florida Og kush]
 
* God's Treat (Jordan of the Island) Dutch Treat X God Bud
 
* Golden Haze (Dr. Greenthumb) Acapulco Gold X Haze
 
* Golden Skush (GN03) Skunk X Hindu Kush
 
* GoldenMoon (GoldenSeed) GoldenSkunk X Mazar
 
* [[Gonzo No. 1]] (Reservoir Seeds) M-39 X Williams Wonder
 
* Gordy’s Spice #18 (Motarebel) Pacific G-13 X Northern Lights #5
 
* Gourdbuster (Motarebel) City Slicker X Killa Queen
 
* [[Grandaddy Kush]]
 
* [[Grandaddy Purple]]
 
* Granflora (Owls Production) Afghan X Purpurea Ticinensis
 
* Grand Poobah: [GDP x Purple Diesel] X Blueberry
 
* Grape Ape (Apothecary Genetics) Afghani X Skunk # 1
 
* Grape Mayhem (Motarebel) Mayhem X Grapefruit Bx1
 
* [[Grape Punch]] (BOG Seeds): Lifesaver X Bogglegum
 
* Grapefruit Haze (Next Generation) Grapefruit X Haze
 
* Grapefruit (Genetics) 75% C'99 X 25% Fruity Sativa
 
* Grapeskunk (Next Generation) Super Skunk X Grapefruit X Blueberry
 
* [[Great Garberville]] (Reeferman): Thai X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* [[Great White Shark]] (Green House) Super Skunk x Brazilian x South Indian
 
* Grease Monkey (Exotic Genetix) Gorilla Glue #4 x Cookies and Cream
 
* [[Green Crack]] (Cecil C): Skunk No. 1 X Sweet Leaf Indica
 
* [[Green Crack SMS|Green Crack]] (SickMeds): Green Crack x Green Crack
 
* [[Green Devil]] (Tiki Seedbank) Bambata X Shulam
 
* [[Green Giant]] (Brothers Grimm): Big Bud X Shiva Skunk
 
* [[Green Napalm]] (Dutch Flowers): Nepal landrace {Sativa} x Mighty Candy
 
* [[Green Spirit]] (Dutch Passion) Big Bud X Skunk No. 1
 
* [[Grenadella]] (Afropips) Grenadine X Cinderella 99
 
* [[Grenadine]] (Dr. Greenthumb) [Niagara X Shiva] X G-13
 
* [[Grimm White Shark]] (Brothers Grimm) Super Skunk x White Widow
 
* [[Guerrilla]] (A.C.E.) South African; Leshoto X Nepalese; Kathmandù Valley
 
* Gummy Berry (Grassroots Rx): Bubble Berry X Bubble Gum Kush
 
* [[Gypsy's Kiss]] (Reeferman Seeds) White Widow X Petrolia Headstash
 
   
  +
<nowiki>The '''kangaroo''' is a [[marsupial]] from the family [[Macropodidae]] (macropods, meaning "large foot"). In common use the term is used to describe the largest species from this family, the [[red kangaroo]], as well as the [[antilopine kangaroo]], [[eastern grey kangaroo]], and [[western grey kangaroo]].<ref name=MSW3>{{MSW3 Groves | pages= 64 & 66}}</ref> Kangaroos are indigenous to [[Australia (continent)|Australia]] and [[New Guinea]]. The Australian government estimates that 34.3&amp;nbsp;million kangaroos lived within the commercial harvest areas of Australia in 2011, up from 25.1&amp;nbsp;million one year earlier.<ref>{{cite web|title=Kangaroo population estimates|url=http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/wildlife-trade/natives/wild-harvest/kangaroo-wallaby-statistics/kangaroo-population|publisher=Government of Australia: Department of the Environment|accessdate=27 October 2014}}</ref></nowiki>
== (H) ==
 
   
  +
As with the terms "<nowiki>[[wallaroo]]" and "[[wallaby]]</nowiki>", "kangaroo" refers to a <nowiki>[[Paraphyly|paraphyletic]]</nowiki> grouping of species.  All three refer to members of the same taxonomic family, Macropodidae, and are distinguished according to size. The largest species in the family are called "kangaroos" and the smallest are generally called "wallabies".  The term "wallaroos" refers to species of an intermediate size.<nowiki><ref name="Australian Wildlife" /></nowiki> There are also the <nowiki>[[tree-kangaroo]]</nowiki>s, another type of macropod, which inhabit the <nowiki>[[tropical rainforest]]s of [[New Guinea]]</nowiki>, far northeastern <nowiki>[[Queensland]]</nowiki> and some of the islands in the region. A general idea of the relative size of these informal terms could be:
* [[Haley's Comet]]: (Flying Dutchmen) Early Californian X Skunk #1
 
* [[Hardcore]]: (Secret Valley) primarily Big Bud x Blueberry
 
* Hash Heaven: (Soma) G13 Hashplant X G13 Haze X Lavender
 
* [[Hash Plant]]: (Sensi Seeds) [Hashplant X Northern Lights #1] X Hash Plant
 
* Hashberry: (Mandala) Landraces, N. India, Kashmir X ??
 
* Hawaiian Goddess No. 3: (Motarebel) Hawaiian Pheno BC God Bud X Sweet Tooth #3
 
* [[Hawaiian Indica]]: (Sensi Seeds)unknown Hawaii Sativa x Northern Lights No. 1
 
* Hawaiian Sativa: (Federation) Landraces: Hawaii, Mauna Kea
 
* Hawaiian Skunk: (Seedsman) Hawaiian Indica X Skunk #1
 
* [[Hawaiian Snow]]: (Green House Seeds): Hawaiian sativa x Laotian sativa
 
* Haze (BlueHemp): Haze 19 X unknown Haze
 
* [[Haze Mist]]: (Flying Dutchmen) {Sativa} South Indian Kerala x Original Haze (see also: Indian Haze)
 
* Haze Special: (KC Brains) Neville’s Haze X K.C.606
 
* [[Headband]]: (DNA Genetics) Sour Diesel x OG Kush
 
* Headband Diesel: [Super Skunk x Sensi Northern Lights] x Chem Dawg
 
* Heavy Duty Fruity: (THSeeds) Big Bud X Afghani Skunk
 
* Hempstar: (Dutch Passion) Skunk X Oasis X Haze
 
* Herijuana: (Motarebel) Killer New Haven Strain X Petrolia Headstash
 
* High Land: (Goodhouse) [Jack Herer X White Widow] X KGB
 
* Highland Afghani: (Reeferman) F1 Hybrid of 2 highland Afghani
 
* [[Highland Nepalese]]: (Reeferman) Landraces; Nepal {Sativa}
 
* Himalayan Gold: (Green House) Landraces; Himalayan X South Indian
 
* Hindu Kush: (Sensi) Landraces; India, Hindu Kush Mountains
 
* [[The Hog]]: (THSeeds) Afghani X Skunk
 
* [[Holland's Hope]]: (Ceres Seeds, Dutch Passion, Nirvana) Viking x Skunk No. 1
 
* Hubba Bubba: (Capricorn) Blueberry X Cinderella 99
 
* Humboldt Berry: (Motarebel) Trainwreck X Blueberry
 
* [[Huron (cannabis)]]: (Dr. Greenthumb) Niagara X White Widow
 
   
  +
<nowiki>* [[Wallaby|wallabies]]</nowiki>: head and body length of 45–105<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;cm and tail length of 33–75<nowiki>&nbsp;cm; the [[dwarf wallaby]]</nowiki> (the smallest of all known macropod species) is 46<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;cm long and weighs 1.6<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;kg;
== (I) ==
 
   
  +
<nowiki>* [[tree-kangaroo]]</nowiki>s: ranging from <nowiki>[[Lumholtz's tree-kangaroo]]</nowiki>: body and head length of 48–65<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;cm, tail of 60–74<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;cm, weight of 7.2<nowiki>&nbsp;kg (16&</nowiki>nbsp;lb) for males and 5.9<nowiki>&nbsp;kg (13&</nowiki>nbsp;lb) for females; to the <nowiki>[[grizzled tree-kangaroo]]</nowiki>: length of 75–90<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;cm (30 to 35 in) and weight of 8–15<nowiki>&nbsp;kg (18–33&</nowiki>nbsp;lb);
* [[Ice]]: (Nirvana) Afghani x Skunk x Northern Lights x Shiva
 
* Ice : (Female Seeds) Skunk Special X White Widow
 
* [[Ice Princess]]: (Brothers Grimm) Princess x White Widow
 
* [[Ice Queen]]: (No Mercy) Master Ice x Valley Queen
 
* [[Indian Haze]]: (Seedsman) South Indian Kerala x Original Haze (see also: Haze Mist)
 
* [[Indian Skunk]]: (Seedsman) South Indian Kerala x Skunk No. 1 (see also: Kerala Krush)
 
* [[Indigo]]: (Vancouver Island Seed Co.) Landrace; North African x Landrace; Afghani
 
* [[Ingemar's Punch]]: (De Sjamaan Seeds) Master Widow x Sweet Skunk
 
* [[Island Sweet Skunk]]: (Federation) White Widow x "Spice of Life's" Sweet Skunk
 
   
  +
<nowiki>* [[wallaroo]]s: the [[black wallaroo]]</nowiki> (the smallest of the two species) with a tail length of 60–70<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;cm and weight of 19–22<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;kg (41.8–48.5<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;lb) for males and 13<nowiki>&nbsp;kg (28.6&</nowiki>nbsp;lb) for females;
== (J) ==
 
   
  +
<nowiki>*</nowiki> kangaroos: a large male can be 2 m (6<nowiki>&</nowiki>nbsp;ft 7 in) tall and weigh 90<nowiki>&nbsp;kg (200&</nowiki>nbsp;lb).
* J.J.’s Gold: (Dr. Greenthumb) Millenium Bud X Acapulco Gold
 
* [[Jack Flash]]: (Sensi Seeds) Jack Herer x Super Skunk x Haze
 
* Jack Frost: (GoldenSeed) Jack Herer X White Widow X Northern Light #5
 
* [[Jack Herer (cannabis)|Jack Herer]]: (Sensi) Shiva Skunk x Northern Lights #5 x Haze
 
* [[Jack the Ripper]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) Jacks Cleaner No. 1 x Space Queen
 
* JackHammer: (Motarebel) SuperJack X BlockHead
 
* [[Jack's Cleaner No. 1]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) {Sativa dominant} {Pluton x Lambsbread x Purple Haze x Northern Lights} x Jack Herer
 
* [[Jack's Cleaner No. 2]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) (Sativa dominant) Jack's Cleaner No. 1 x Jack the Ripper
 
* [[Jack's Cleaner BX]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) {Sativa dominant} Jack's Cleaner No. 1 x (Jack's Cleaner No. 1 x Blueberry)
 
* Jamaica: (Hemcy) Lambsbread X [Skunk X Ruderalis]
 
* Jamaican: (Federation) Landraces; Jamaica X ??
 
* Jamaican Pearl: (Sensi) ?Marley’s Collie X Early Pearl?
 
* Janis Special: (Fleur du Mal) Silver Pearl X Blue Widow
 
* Jesus Queso: (JEF) The Church O.G.X Dutch Cheese
 
* [[Jillybean]]: (Subcool) Orange Velvet x Space Queen
 
* Jim Dandy: (Motarebel) Jim Wakeford X Killa Queen
 
* Johnny Blaze: (Chimera) Neville’s Haze X Blueberry
 
* Juicy fruit (??) Landrace Thai Landrace Afghani
 
   
== (K) ==
 
   
* [[K2 (cannabis)|K2]]: White Widow x Hindu Kush
 
* K2 Special (No Mercy) [K2 X Mexican Haze] X Victory
 
* K.C.33 (KC Brains) Afghani X Haze X Ukrainian strain
 
* K.C.36 (KC Brains) Indica from Spain X K.C.606
 
* K.C.42 (KC Brains) New Zealand Best X K.C.639
 
* K-Train (Woodhorse) K2 X Arcata Trainwreck
 
* Kahuna (Soma) Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X Jack Herer X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* [[Kaia Kush]] (Apothecary Seeds): Super Silver Haze x OG Kush
 
* Kali’s Bliss (Reeferman) Reeferman’s Cambodian X Cinderella 99
 
* [[Kali Mist]] (Serious Seeds): Two Sativa dominant hybrids
 
* Kali Snapple (Dynasty): Kali Myst x Pineapple
 
* Kali Spice (Dman) Kali Mist X Silver Spice
 
* Kalichakra (Mandala) Crystal Queen X White Satin
 
* Kanasuta (Canadian Seed Co.) Aurora Beaurealis X Cinderella 99
 
* [[Kandy Kush]] (DNA Genetics) {Indica dominant}: OG Kush x Trainwreck
 
* Karpov (Blue Grass) Blue Hen X Blueberry
 
* Kasparov (Blue Grass) Blue Kiev X Blueberry
 
* Kerala Gold (Barney's Farm) South Indian, Kerala X Skunk #1
 
* Kerala Krush (Flying Dutchmen) South Indian, Kerala X Skunk #1 (see also: Indian Skunk)
 
* KGB (Vancouver Seeds) Afghani X Burmese
 
* Khola (Dutch Passion) [Thailand X Brazil] X ?an early Dutch strain
 
* Kill Bill (Reservoir) Killer Queen X William’s Wonder
 
* Killa Kush (Motarebel) Bubba Kush X Killa Queen
 
* Killa Queen (CGBA) Airborne G-13 x Cinderella 99<span style="color:rgb(150,159,170);font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;font-size:13px;line-height:19px;"> </span>
 
* Killer Apollo (Reservoir) Killer Queen X Apollo 11
 
* Killer Kristalls (Motarebel) Jim Dandy X Black Kat
 
* Killer Newhaven (??) Sativa Pheno from Herijuana
 
* Killer Queen (Reservoir) Airborne’s G13 X Cinderella 99
 
* Killer Queen 2 (Canadian Seed Co.) G13 X Cinderella 99
 
* Killian (Motarebel) Killa Queen X NYC Diesel
 
* Killin Garberville (BC Seed Co.) Hawaiian Sativa X Afghani Indica
 
* Killing Fields (Sannie's Seeds): Jack Herrer x The One
 
* King’s Kross (Reeferman) [King X Charles Kush] X King
 
* King's Kush (Green House) NYC Diesel X Grape X OG Kush
 
* Kiwi (Homegrown Fantaseeds) Landraces; New Zealand
 
* Klingonberry (Dutch Flowers) Bubblegum X Sagarmatha’s Blueberry X Aloha 98
 
* KO Kush (SensiSeeds): Killa Kush x Herijuana
 
* Kolinahr (Enterprise) Vulcan X White Widow
 
* Kolossus (Sannie's Seeds): Shack x Big White
 
* Kong (Laughing Moon) Kong X [White Russian X BubbleGum]
 
* [[Kosher Kush]] (DNA Genetics)
 
* Kranial Kush (Motarebel) Bubba Kush X [Bubba Kush X Yumbolt]
 
* Kush Berry (Motarebel) Bubbleberry X [Bubba Kush X Yumbolt]
 
* [[Kushage]] (THSeeds): O.G. Kush x S.A.G.E.
 
* [[KushDee]] (All Star Genetics): Alegria (m) x OG Kush (clone)
 
* Kwik Kali (Sagarmatha) Western Winds X Stuporsonic
 
   
  +
Kangaroos have large, powerful <nowiki>[[hind leg]]</nowiki>s, large feet adapted for leaping, a long muscular tail for balance, and a small head. Like most marsupials, female kangaroos have a <nowiki>[[Pouch (marsupial)|pouch]]</nowiki> called a marsupium in which <nowiki>[[Joey (marsupial)|joey]]s complete [[postnatal]]</nowiki> development.
== (L) ==
 
   
* [[L.A. Cheese]] (Royal Dutch Genetics): L.A. Confidential x Royal Dutch Cheese
 
* [[L.A. Confidential]]( Genetics): L.A. Affie x Afghani
 
* L.S.D. (BOG) Lifesaver X NYC Diesel
 
* [[LSD (cannabis)|LSD]] (Barney's Farm): Mazar x Skunk No. 1
 
* La Nina (Mr. Nice) Haze X White Widow
 
* La Nina ( Shantibaba- Mr. Nice) South Indian X Jamaican Sativa X Haze
 
* Lambada (Reeferman) Brazilian X Highland Nepalese
 
* Lambsbread Skunk (Dutch Passion) Jamaican Lambsbread X Skunk #1
 
* Lasqueti Haze (BC Bud Depot) ?? X Skunk
 
* [[Laughing Buddha]] (Barney's Farm): Thai x Jamaiican
 
* [[Lavender]] (Soma Seeds): Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* Lebanese (BlueHemp) Landraces, Lebanese
 
* [[Leda Uno]] (KC Brains): [secret Brazilian strain X K.C.33] X [Leda X K.C.606]
 
* Legends Ultimate Indica (Legends) Ortega X Sweet Tooth
 
* Lemon Bud (Canadian Gen.) Monster Bud X Lemon Joy
 
* Lemon Chemo (Woodhorse) BC Chemo X Ontario Chemo
 
* Lemon Diesel ( ? ) West Coast Diesel X Lemon Skunk
 
* Lemon Freeze (Subcool) Jacks Cleaner X [Jacks Cleaner X Blueberry]
 
* [[Lemon Haze]] (Dutch Passion): Lemon Skunk x Haze
 
* Lemon OG Kush (DNA Genetics): Lemon Skunk X OG Kush #18
 
* Lemon G (Ohio) aka Electric Lemon G (THSeeds): Unknown Meggs County Ohio cross
 
* Lemon Skunk (Jordan of the Island) Citrus Skunk X Skunk #1
 
* [[Lemon Stinky]] (Crazy x Seeds) Sensi Star x Chronic
 
* Leshaze (Canna Biogen) Landraces; Lesotho X [Skunk X Haze]
 
* Lieu Hanh (Spice Brothers) Vietnamese X Neville’s Haze
 
* Lieu Hanh 99 (Spice Brothers) Lieu Hanh X Cinderella 99
 
* Life Star (BOG) Lifesaver X Sensi Star
 
* Lifesaver (BOG) Jack's Cleaner X DJ Short's Blueberry X BogBubble
 
* Lime Chemo (Woodhorse) Ontario Chemo X BC Chemo X Timewarp X Citrus
 
* Lime Green Skunk (?): Super Skunk X Northern Lights
 
* Lionheart (Almighty) African Sativa X North American Genetics
 
* Lone Ranger (SSSC) Nepali Sativa X Michiocan Mexican Sativa
 
* [[Love Potion No. 1]] (Reeferman) [G13 x Santa Marta Columbian Gold] X Santa Marta Columbian Gold
 
* Love Potion No. 9 (Joker) Love Potion 5 X Northern Lights
 
* Low P.T. (Reeferman) Oregon Purple Thai X LowRyder
 
* Lowland Afghani (Reeferman) 2 Lowland Afghani strains
 
* Lowrider (Joint Doctors) Northern Light #2 X William Wonder X unknown hybrid
 
   
== (M) ==
 
   
  +
The large kangaroos have adapted much better than the smaller macropods to land clearing for pastoral agriculture and habitat changes brought to the Australian landscape by humans. Many of the smaller species are rare and endangered, while kangaroos are relatively plentiful.
* M-39 (SSSC) Skunk #1 X Basic #5
 
* M3 (Sunshine) [AK47 X Haze] X Hashplant
 
* [[Mabombe]] (Afropips Seeds) Malaki x Sweet Tooth No. 3 x Congo Nepalese
 
* [[Mako Haze]] (Kiwiseeds)
 
* Mako Shark (Motarebel) Black Widow X Great White Shark
 
* [[Malaki]] (Afropips) Malawi Gold X White Russian
 
* [[Malawi Gold]] (African Seeds) Landraces; Malawi, Lake Malawi
 
* [[Malberry]] (Afropips) Malawi Gold X Blueberry
 
* Malibu (Chimera) Cali-O X Blue Domino
 
* [[Malonica]] (Crazy x Seeds) Malawi Gold (African Seeds) x Chronic
 
* Magical Goddess (Unknown) - Clone Only Strain, Pacific NW
 
* Magic Carpet Ride (Reeferman) Headstash X Cambodian
 
* Magic Crystal (White Widow Web) White Widow X California Orange
 
* Mandarin Punch (Juan Moore) Killer Queen X Tangerine
 
* Manga Rosa (Brazilian Seed Company) Landraces from the 70s; Brazil
 
* Mango (KC Brains) Afghani X KC33
 
* Mango13 (Krip Keeper)
 
* Mangolian Indica (Sagarmatha) = Afghani Skunk X Afghani X Northern Lights
 
* Manolito 1 (Goodhouse) White Rhino X KGB
 
* [[Marley's Collie]] (Sensi Seeds) Jamaican sativa x Maple Leaf Indica
 
* [[Martian Mean Green]] (DNA Genetics) Sharks Breath X G13 Haze
 
* Master Bubble: Master Kush X Bubblegum
 
* Master Ice (No Mercy) Mind Bender X Northern Lights
 
* Master Kush (Black Label) Hindu Kush X Skunk
 
* Masterkush (Dutch Passion) Hindu Kush X Hindu Kush
 
* [[Matanuska Mint]] (Sagarmatha) Matanuska Tundra X Grey Mist
 
* Maui Mist (BC Seed Co.) Hawaiian Indica X Haze
 
* Mayhem (Motarebel) Russian Indica Clone X Blockhead
 
* [[Mazar]] (Dutch Passion) Afghanistan / Skunk x Skunk No. 1
 
* MCW (NCGA) Mighty Mite X Chemo X White Widow
 
* Medicine Man (Mr. Nice) [Brazilian Sativa X South Indian] X Afghani
 
* MedMaster (Reeferman) UBC Chemo X Reeferman’s G
 
* Mendocino Madness (THSeeds) Northern Cali Madness X “a parent of Kwiksilver”
 
* Merlins Dream (White Widow Web) Master Widow X Afghani
 
* Merville Blueberry (BC Bud Depot) Blueberry X Grapefruit
 
* Mexican Sativa (Sensi) Mexican, Oaxacan X Pakistani Hashplant X Durban
 
* Mighty Haze Candy (Dutch Flower) Mighty Chemo Widow X Uber Candy Haze
 
* Mikush (Federation) Mikado X Kush
 
* Mind Bender (KC Brains) KC2 X KC33 X Afghani
 
* Mindf**k (Reservoir) New York City Diesel X DTC 99
 
* Mississippi Sweet Bud (JOTI) Kush X Burmese
 
* Mississippi Queen (Juan Moore) Princess 75 X Airborne G13
 
* Misty (Positronics) Sister of White Widow
 
* [[MK Ultra]] (THSeeds) G13 X O.G. Kush
 
* MKage (THSeeds): MK Ultra x S.A.G.E.
 
* [[File:Moon cheese 005.JPG|thumb|Exodus Cheese x Brazilian sativa]]Moon Cheese (70s Bush Seed Co) Exodus Cheese x Brazilian sativa
 
* Moon Shadow (Joey Weed) [Chemo x White Rhino] X Cinderella 99
 
* Moonflower (Canadian Seed Co.) Cinderella 99 X Apollo 11
 
* Morning Dew (Dman) Endless Sky X Cinderella 99
 
* [[Morning Glory]] (Barney's Farm Seeds): Afghani/Hawaiian/Skunk
 
* [[Mother's Finest]] (Sensi Seeds): unknown
 
* [[Mount Cook]] (Kiwiseeds): Afghan / Thai (f) x (Northern Lights x Hashplant) (m)
 
* Mountain Jam (Chimera & Dj Short) Soulshine X Blueberry
 
* Mountain Lion (Almighty) Rock Bud X Lionheart
 
* MP5K (Dr. Chronic) AK X Afghani
 
* Mr. Bubble (THSeeds) Kali Mist X Bubblegum
 
* Mr. Majestyx (Afropips) Malberry X Cinderella 99
 
* Mr. Nice (Sensi) G13 X Hash Plant
 
* Ms. Universe (Dynasty): Dess*tar x Space Queen F3
 
   
== (N) ==
 
   
* [[Nebula]] (Paradise Seeds): (US Haze-Cross x Ingemar's Master Widow)
 
* Neon Super Skunk (Subcool) Super Skunk X Black Russian
 
* Nepal Baba (Dr. Atomic) [Landraces; Nepal X Northern Lights] X Northern Lights
 
* Nepalese Grizzly (Kootenay Mountain) [Dutch Treat x Nepali] X Chemo
 
* Nepalese Jam (Ace) Nepalese Kathmandu Sativa X Jamaican Blue Mountain1984
 
* Nepali (BlueHemp) Landraces; Nepal, Baglung
 
* [[Neville's Haze]] (Green House) Pure Haze X Northern Lights
 
* Neville's Haze Hybrid (Female Seeds) Neville’s Haze X Jack Herer
 
* New Killer Queen (Juan Moore) Airborne G13 X Cinderella 99
 
* New Purple Cross (Mr. Blue) Afghani X Jamaican
 
* New Purple Power (Nirvana) Holland’s Hope X Skunk #1
 
* [[NYC Diesel|New York City Diesel]] (Soma) Mexican Sativa X Afghani
 
* Nigerian (Afropips) Landraces, Nigeria
 
* [[Night Shade]] (Barney's Farm): Kashmir, Nepali
 
* Nirvana Special (Nirvana) Jock Horror X Landraces; Mexico, Oaxaca
 
* No Mercy Special (No Mercy) [Santa Maria X Maxican Haze] X Victory
 
* North #1 (Hill Temple) Cinderella 99 X Blue Kiev
 
* Northern Berry (Peak Seeds & Hygro) Northern Lights #5 X Blueberry
 
* Northern Bright (Nirvana) Northern Lights X Haze
 
* Northern Dream (Reeferman) [Kodiak Gold Thunderf**k x Northern Lights #5] X Northern Lights #5
 
* Northern Lights (BC Bud Depot) Atomic Northern Light X Northern Lights #6
 
* Northern Lights No. 1 (SSSC) Afghani IBL
 
* Northern Lights No. 2 (SSSC) Hindu Kush X Thai
 
* Northern Lights No. 9 (Sagarmatha) Northern Lights X White Widow X Durban
 
* Northern Skunk (Peak Seeds) Northern Light #5 X Skunk
 
* [[Nutcruncher]] (Reeferman) Airborne G13 X Petrolia Headstash
 
   
  +
The kangaroo is a <nowiki>[[National symbols of Australia|symbol of Australia]]</nowiki>, appears on the <nowiki>[[Coat of arms of Australia|Australian coat of arms]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Commonwealth Coat of Arms |url=https://www.pmc.gov.au/government/commonwealth-coat-arms|work=Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet |date=22 June 2016|publisher=Australian Government |accessdate=29 April 2020}}</ref></nowiki> and on some of its <nowiki>[[Australian coins|currency]],<ref>{{cite web|title=One Dollar |url=https://www.ramint.gov.au/one-dollar |work=Royal Australian Mint |date=8 January 2016 |publisher=Australian Government |accessdate=29 April 2020 }}</ref></nowiki> and is used as a logo for some of Australia's most well-known organisations, such as <nowiki>[[Qantas]],<ref>{{cite web|title=The Kangaroo Symbol|url=http://www.qantas.com.au/info/about/history/details19|work=Qantas|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060414182719/http://www.qantas.com.au/info/about/history/details19|archivedate=14 April 2006}}</ref> and as the [[roundel]] of the [[Royal Australian Air Force]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.airforce.gov.au/About_us/About_the_RAAF/Air_Force_Ensign/?RAAF-8f1IO5DsOyuE6wai0uL8r0DjCUFX+enq|title=RAAF Ensign and Roundel|author=Air Force}}</ref></nowiki> The kangaroo is important to both <nowiki>[[Culture of Australia|Australian culture]]</nowiki> and the national image, and consequently there are numerous <nowiki>[[Kangaroo emblems and popular culture|popular culture references]]</nowiki>.
== (O) ==
 
   
* [[Oasis]] (Dutch Passion) an advancement of Northern Lights #2
 
* [[Odin’s Hammer]] (Reeferman Seeds) Kodiak Gold x Acapulco Gold
 
* [[OG No. 18]] (Reserva Privada) OG Kush S1 phenotype
 
* Ogre ( ? ) Master Kush X Bubba Kush
 
* [[Opium (cannabis)|Opium]] (Paradise Seeds)
 
* Optimus Prime (BC Bud Depot) BC Sweet Tooth X Mayne Island Indica
 
* Orange Apollo (Reservoir) [1977 Aeric Cali-O X Apollo 11] X Apollo 11
 
* Orange Chemo (Woodhorse) BC Chemo X Ontario Chemo X Timewarp X California Orange
 
* [[Orange Kush]]
 
* Orange Peako Cambodian (Reeferman) Nepalese Indica X Cambodian Sativa
 
* Orange Spice (Dman) Double G X White Widow
 
* Orangina (Blue Grass) California Orange X Blue Bubblejuice
 
* Orient Express (A.C.E.) Vietnam Black X Chinese; Yunnan
 
* Original Green (Brazilian Seed Company) Landraces from the 80s; Brazil, São Paulo
 
* Original Haze (Seedsman) [Mexican x Columbian] X Thai X South Indian Kerala
 
* Original Highway Delight ( High Quality) Northern Light X Skunk
 
* Original Strawberry Diesel (Reservoir) Strawberry Couch X Sour Diesel
 
* Other Crystal Ship, The: (Reeferman) Kali Mist X Northern Light #5
 
   
== (P) ==
 
   
  +
Wild kangaroos are shot for meat, <nowiki>[[Kangaroo leather|leather hide]]</nowiki>s, and to protect grazing land.<nowiki><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.kangaroo-industry.asn.au/morinfo/BACKGR1.HTM |title=Kangaroo Industry Background Kangaroo Industries Association of Australia. July 2008 |publisher=Kangaroo-industry.asn.au |date=31 July 1997 |accessdate=5 April 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090205023954/http://www.kangaroo-industry.asn.au/morinfo/BACKGR1.HTM |archivedate=5 February 2009  }}</ref></nowiki> Although controversial, <nowiki>[[kangaroo meat]]</nowiki> has perceived health benefits for human consumption compared with traditional meats due to the low level of fat on kangaroos.<nowiki><ref>{{Cite news|last=Dow|first=Steve|title=An industry that's under the gun|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/environment/an-industry-thats-under-the-gun/2007/09/25/1190486311919.html?page=fullpage|accessdate=2 October 2011|newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald|date=26 September 2007}}</ref></nowiki>
* Pakalolo (Sativa Seed Bank) Landraces; Hawaii, Maui X Skunk #1
 
* Pakistani (BlueHemp) Landraces, Pakistan
 
* Panama (A.C.E.) [Panama 1974 X Panama] X Panama; Canary Island
 
* Panama Powerhouse (Dman) Panama Red X AK-47
 
* Panama Punch (Cannabis Pros) Panama Green X Neville’s Haze
 
* [[Panama Red]]: Landraces
 
* Papaya (Nirvana) Citral #13 X Ice #2
 
* Passion Queen (??) Grapefruit X BC Grapefruit
 
* Passion #1 (Dutch Passion) = Amstel Gold
 
* [[Peace Maker]]: (De Sjamaan) Super Skunk x White Widow
 
* Peak 19 (Sagarmatha) Stonehedge X Matanuska Tundra
 
* Phnom Phen (Reeferman) Thai X Haze X Cambodian
 
* Pine Tar Kush (Tom Hill) Pakistani IBL
 
* Pine-A-Hash (GrassRoots Rx): Pineapple x India Hash Plant
 
* Pineapple Kush (?): Pineapple x Master Kush
 
* Pineapples Punch (Flying Dutchmen) Real McCoy X Skunk #1
 
* Pink Candy (Mr. Blue) Stinky Pinky X Cotton Candy
 
* Pink Widow (Effettoserra) [Afghani X South Indian] X Purple Widow
 
* Platinum (Afropips) Amstel Gold X Silver Pearl
 
* Polderlicht (Dutch Genes) Power Plant X Ancient Shiva
 
* Pollypak (SSSC) Pollyanna X Pakistani Sativa
 
* [[Pot of Gold]] (Flying Dutchmen): Hindu Kush x Skunk No. 1
 
* Potent Purple (Reeferman) Oregon Purple Thai X ?California Indica?
 
* Power House (Hill Temple) Deep Chunk X Cinderella 99
 
* Power Kush (Dinafem): Afghani x Skunk#1
 
* Power Plant (Dutch Passion) Landraces; South Africa
 
* Presidential Kush (DNA Genetics): See Lemon OG Kush
 
* [[Princess]] (Mr. Soul of Brothers Grimm)
 
* Princess Diesel (Reservoir) Ice Princess X Sour Diesel
 
* [[Psycho Crack]] (SickMeds) Exodus Psychosis x Green Crack
 
* Psycho Fire (SickMeds) Exodus Psychosis x Strawberry Fire
 
* Puna Budder (THSeeds) some Hawaiian & some Afghani
 
* Purple Czar (Motarebel) Black Russian X The Black “aka Burmese”
 
* Purple Kush ( ? ) Hindu Kush X Afghan Purple
 
* Purple Lightning (BC Seed Co.) Purple Indica X Northern Lights #5
 
* Purple Power (Amsterdam Marijuana) Holland’s Hope X Skunk #1
 
* Purple Skunk (Dutch Passion) Purple #1 X Early Skunk
 
* Purple Thai (??) Oaxaca Gold X Chocolate Thai
 
* Purple Trainwreck ( ? ) Purple Kush X Trainwreck
 
* [[The Purps|Purps, The]] (BC Bud Depot): Mendo Purps clone x Purps
 
* Pyramid (White Widow Web) White Widow X [Haze X Skunk]
 
   
== (Q) ==
 
   
* [[Qleaner]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) {Sativa dominant} Jack's Cleaner No. 1 x Querkle
 
* [[Qrazy Train]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) {Sativa/Indica is 50-50} (Trainwreck x Trinity) x Querkle
 
* [[Querkle]]: (TGA Subcool Seeds) Urkle (f) x Space Queen (m)
 
* [[Quick Mist Diesel]]: (Reservoir) Kali Mist x Mighty Mite x Double Sour Diesel v2
 
   
  +
<nowiki>== Terminology ==</nowiki>
== (R) ==
 
   
  +
<nowiki>[[File:RedRoo.JPG|thumb|right|A male [[red kangaroo]]]]</nowiki>
* Raccoon / Rocky (Canadian Seed Co.) Afghani X Columbian Gold
 
* Real McCoy, the (Flying Dutchmen) Skunk #1 X South Indian Sativa
 
* [[Reclining Buddha]] (Soma) Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X Holland’s Hope
 
* ReCON (DNA Genetics) Mutant L.A. Confidential X Cannadential
 
* [[Red Cherry Berry]] (Barney's Farm): Skunk No. 1 / California Indica
 
* Red Congolese (Reeferman) Congolese Sativa X [Mexican X Afghani]
 
* Red Devil (Greenhouse) Afghani X Afghani Skunk
 
* [[Red Diesel]] (Barney's Farm): California Indica x NYC Diesel
 
* [[Red Dragon]] (Barney's Farm): West Himalayan Kush x Utopia Haze
 
* Red Haze (??) Neville’s Haze X Panama Red
 
* Red Horse (Goodhouse) [Jack Herer X Top 44] X KGB
 
* [[Red Sativa]] (Brazilian Seeds) Landraces; Brazil
 
* Red Widow 13 (Dman) [G13 X Black Widow] X Panama Red
 
* Redhaired Sonja (BlueHemp) [Afghani X Thai] X [Thai X Brazil]
 
* Reefer Madness (Reeferman) Mexican a.k.a Blackseed X G13
 
* Reeferman’s G (Reeferman) Airborne G13 X [Airborne G13 x Santa Marta Columbian Gold]
 
* Reeferman’s Herijuana (Reeferman) SSSC’s Herijuana Sativa pheno X SSSC’s Herijuana Indica pheno
 
* Reeferman’s Northern Light (Reeferman) Northern Lights #1 X Reeferman’s Northern Lights #5
 
* Reeferman’s Sour Diesel (Reeferman) Sour Diesel X Kush
 
* Reeferman’s Space Queen (Reeferman) Romulan X Cinderella 99
 
* Remus (Federation) Island Sweet Skunk X Romulan
 
* Renatta (A.C.E.) North East Brazilian Sativa X Cambodia Haze
 
* Rheingold (Nova) Sensistar X Black Domina
 
* Rock Bud “aka Soma A+”(Soma) Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* Rock Star (Bong Guru) Sensi Star X Rock Bud
 
* Rocklock (DNA Genetics) Warlock X RockStar
 
* Romberry (Homegrown Fantaseeds) Romulan X Blueberry
 
* Romberry (BCGA) Romulan X Blueberry
 
* Rombolt (Motarebel) Romulan X Yumbolt
 
* [[Romulan]] (Federation) California X [White Whino X White Rhino]
 
* Romulan Haze (Next Generation) Silver Haze(R) X Romulan
 
* Rongony (Landraces, Madagascar)
 
* Royal Hawaiian (Reeferman) Hawaiian Indica X Hawaiian Sativa
 
* Royal Orange (Flying Dutchmen) Skunk #1 X California Orange
 
* Ru-Pa (HD Canadian) Cotton Candy X Heavy Duty Fruity
 
* Ruderalis Sativa (SSSC) Ruderalis X [Thai x Mexican]
 
   
  +
<nowiki>The word ''kangaroo'' derives from the [[Guugu Yimithirr language|Guugu Yimithirr]] word ''gangurru'', referring to [[eastern grey kangaroo]]s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Etymology of mammal names in English|publisher=IberiaNature|url=http://iberianature.com/britainnature/miscellaneous/etymology-of-mammal-names-in-english/|accessdate=18 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Stephens|first=S.E.|author2=Cilento, Raphael|title=Introduction to Cooktown and its Museum|publisher=[[National Trust of Queensland]]|year=1976|asin=B0000CPFEZ}}</ref> The name was first recorded as "kanguru" on 12 July 1770 in an entry in the diary of Sir [[Joseph Banks]]; this occurred at the site of modern [[Cooktown, Queensland|Cooktown]], on the banks of the [[Endeavour River]], where {{HMS|Endeavour}} under the command of Lieutenant [[James Cook]] was beached for almost seven weeks to repair damage sustained on the [[Great Barrier Reef]].<ref>[http://andc.anu.edu.au/sites/default/files/vocab_aussie_eng.pdf Bruce Moore, ''The Vocabulary of Australian English'', Australian National Dictionary Centre, Australian National University]</ref> Cook first referred to kangaroos in his diary entry of 4 August. Guugu Yimithirr is the language of the [[Guugu Yimithirr people|people]] of the area.</nowiki>
== (S) ==
 
   
* [[S.A.G.E.]] (TH Seeds): Haze x unknown Afghan Indica
 
* SabreTooth (Motarebel) Sweet Tooth #3 X Northern Light
 
* Sacra Frasca (Dutch Passion) Powerplant X Skunk Passion
 
* Sadhu (Mandala) [?? X ??] X Landraces, N. India
 
* [[Sage 'N Sour]] (THSeeds): S.A.G.E. x Sour Diesel
 
* SandStorm (Canna Biogen) Landraces; Pakistan, Chitral X Landraces; Morocco, Arabene
 
* Sangoma (Afropips) [Malawi X Silver Pearl] X Blueberry
 
* Sanug (Canadian Seed Co.) Thai X Cambodian
 
* Sapphire Star (Jordan of the Island) Blue Hawaiian X God Bud
 
* Satori (Mandala) Landraces; Nepalese X ??
 
* Schnazzleberry (Chimera) Blue Domino X Shishkaberry
 
* Senor Garcia (Reeferman) Oregon Purple Thai X Panama Red
 
* [[Sensi Star]] (Paradise Seeds): various hybrid Indicas and a very small amount of Sativa.
 
* Sensitron (Almighty) Jack Herer X Sensi Star
 
* Shack (Sannie's SeedS): Shiva x Sannie's Jack
 
* Shackzilla (Sannie's Seeds): Super Silver Haze x Shack f2
 
* Shagadellic (GN03) Indian Sativa X Skunk
 
* Shaman (Dutch Passion) Purple #1 X Skunk
 
* Shanti Devi (Tiki) Afghani X ??
 
* Sharks Breath (DNA Genetics) Great White Shark X Jamaican Lambsbread
 
* Sheherazade (Paradise) Afghan X (Mostly Sativa?)
 
* Shenzhou (Canadian Seed Co.) Sugar Klingon X Cinderella 99
 
* Shiesel (Bong Guru) Shiva X NYC Diesel
 
* Shirin Gol (Herbaria) Landraces; Tadjikistan
 
* Shirin Mango (Herbaria) Shirin Gol X Afghan
 
* [[Shishkaberry]] (Spice of Life): Afghani x Blueberry
 
* Shit (Mr. Nice) the Original “Afghani X Skunk” (SSSC’s?)
 
* Shiva (Dr. Atomic) Afghani X Atomic Northern Lights X Super Crystal
 
* [[Shiva Shanti No. 2]] (Sensi Seeds) Garlic Bud X Skunk X Afghani
 
* Shiva Skunk (Sensi) Skunk #1 X Northern Lights #5
 
* Shock (Mr. Nice) White Widow X Skunk #1
 
* Silver Blue (Homegrown Fantaseeds) Silver Pearl X Blueberry
 
* Silver Dream (BlueHemp) Purple Dream X Swiss Sativa X Monstera
 
* [[Silver Haze]]: (Sensi Seed Bank) unknown Indica x Haze
 
* [[Silver Pearl]]: (Sensi Seed Bank) Early Pearl x Skunk No. 1 x Northern Lights
 
* Silver Spice (Dman) Endless Sky X Orange Spice
 
* Silverado (BlueHemp) Silver Dream X Northern Lights #2
 
* [[Skunk No. 1]]: (Cultivators Choice) Mexico/Colombia/Afghanistan
 
* Skunk No. 5: (Effettoserra) [Afghani X Acapulco Gold x Colombian Gold] X Dutch Skunk
 
* Skunk Berry (Peak Seeds) Skunk X Blueberry
 
* Skunk Haze (Seedsman) Skunk #1 X Original Haze
 
* Skunk Kush (Sensi) Hindu Kush X Skunk #1
 
* Skunk Power (Effettoserra) “Big yielding phenotype” X White Afghani
 
* Skunkaberry (Reeferman) Newberry X Chinese Indica
 
* Skunkberry (Cannabis Pros) Blueberry X Skunk #1
 
* Sky Dog (Willy Jack) Jack Herer X Williams Wonder X Haze
 
* Skywalker (Dutch Passion) Mazar X Blueberry
 
* Slyder (Sagarmatha) Landraces: Afghanistan X Northern Lights
 
* Smoka Cola (Dman) Star Gazer X [G13 X Black Widow]
 
* Smokey Bear (Dutch Passion) Masterkush X KC 33
 
* Snapple (Dynasty): Snowbud x Pineapple
 
* Snowcap ( ? ? ) Humboldt Snow X Unknown Haze
 
* Snowmann(cookie Fam) Floridah OG x Original cut GSC 
 
* Snow Slyder (Joker) Afghani X Northern Lights
 
* Snow White (Cannabis Pros) Northern Light #5 X Cinderella 99
 
* Somango (Soma) Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X Jack Herer
 
* Somanna (Soma) Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X C. Chinensis X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* Somativa (Soma) Super Skunk X Big Skunk Korean X Jack Herer
 
* Somaui (Soma) Hawaiian Sativa X G-13 Haze
 
* [[Sour Diesel]]: (Reservoir) Mexican Sativa X Chemo
 
* Sour Mist (Reservoir) Kali Mist X Double Sour Diesel
 
* [[Sour Power]] (HortiLab Seeds): Starbud x ECSD v3 sour daddy
 
* Sour Queen (Reservoir) Killer Queen X Double Sour Diesel
 
* Sour Turbo (Motarebel) Double Sour Diesel v2 X Sour Diesel v2.5
 
* Sour Wonder (Reservoir) Williams Wonder X Sour Diesel
 
* Southern Lights (Delta 9) N.Y.C Diesel X Sensi Star
 
* [[Space Queen]] (BC Growers Association) Romulan x Cinderella 99
 
* Spacetooth #3 (Subcool) Sweet Tooth #3 X Space Queen
 
* Special AK (Goodhouse) AK-47 X KGB
 
* Speed Queen (Mandala) Landraces, N. India, Himachal Pradesh X ??
 
* Speedball (Reservoir) Sensi Star X DTC 99
 
* Spellbound (Dman) William’s Wonder X Sour Diesel
 
* Spice (Mr. Nice) Hawaiian Indica X Hawaiian Sativa
 
* Spontanica (KC Brains) Secret Project #1 X KC33
 
* Sputnik 1.0 (Subcool) Apollo 13 X Black Russian
 
* Sputnik 2.0 (Subcool) Sputnik 1.0 X Apollo 13
 
* Star Chief (White Widow Web) Master Widow X Himalaya Haze
 
* Star Gazer (Delta 9) [Warlock X AK-47] X Sensi Star
 
* Star Gazer (Dman) Endless Sky X Bubbleberry
 
* [[Starbud]] (HortiLab): unknown Indica
 
* [[Starlight]] (White Widow Web) Master Widow X Northern Lights
 
* Starship (Dynasty): Kali Snapple x Pineapple Kush
 
* Starwalker (Canadian Seed Co.) [Romulan x Cinderella 99] X Cinderella 99
 
* Sticky Sista (Herbaria) Afghanistan, Hindu Kush X South African, Ciskei
 
* [[Stonehedge]] (Sagarmatha) Cambodian Sativa x Western Winds
 
* Stoney Baloney (Juan Moore) [Cinderella 99 X Kali Mist] X Tangerine
 
* Stoney High (White Widow Web) Master Widow X Super Skunk
 
* [[Strawberry Cough]] (Dutch Passion Seeds)
 
* Sudden Impact (Blue Grass) [Mr. Nice G13 X Hashplant] X AK-47
 
* Sugar Babe (Paradise) Afghani X Swiss White Strain
 
* [[Sugar Baby]] (NCGA) Vic High’s Orange Crush X G13 Blue Widow
 
* Sugar Daddy (Capricorn) California Indica X Sugar Blossom
 
* Sugar Klingon (Dutch Flowers) Klingonberry X Fig Widow Queen
 
* Sugar Klingon II (Canadian Seed Co.) Klingonberry X Fig Widow Queen
 
* Sugar Loaf (Canna Biogen) Landraces; Pakistan X Capricho
 
* Sugarwarp (Reeferman) Texada Timewarp X Burmese
 
* Summer Queen (No Mercy) Everest Queen X Northern Light
 
* Sunshine #2 (Hill Temple) Sunshine X Deep Chunk
 
* Sunshine Daydream (Dman) Silver Spice X AK-47
 
* Super Afghani (World Wide Seeds) Afghani #1 X Super Skunk
 
* Super Dawg = Dawg X 86’Sensi Super Skunk (sources: cannabible)
 
* Super Green (Brazilian Seed Company) Early Green X Jack Herer
 
* Super Haze (Dutch Passion) Original Haze X Skunk #1
 
* Super Impact (Blue Grass) Sudden Impact X Silver Haze(R)
 
* Super Kimo (Brazilian Seed Company) UBC Chemo X Jack Herer X Haze Special
 
* Super Kush (BC Seed Co.) Hindu Kush X Northern Lights #5
 
* [[Super Lemon Haze]] (Green House Seed Co.): Lemon Skunk x Super Silver Haze
 
* Super Sativa Plus (THC Seeds) Hawaiian Sativa X BC Biker Bud
 
* Silver Haze(R) (Mr. Nice) [Northern Lights #5 x N. Haze] X [Skunk #1 x N. Haze]
 
* [[Super Silver Haze]] (Green House Seeds): Skunk/Northern Lights/Haze
 
* Super Silver Sour Diesel Haze (Reservoir) Silver Haze(R) X Sour Diesel
 
* Super Silver Spice (Dman) Endless Sky X Silver Spice
 
* [[Super Skunk]]: (Sensi Seeds) Skunk No. 1 x Afghani
 
* Super Star (Delta 9) Sensi Star X Sensi Star
 
* Super Sweet Cindy 05 (BOG) [Sweet Tooth #3 X Cinderella 99] X BogBubble
 
* Surface To Air Missile [S.A.M.] (Da'Bean Co.) Williams Wonder X UBC Chemo
 
* Swazi Redbeard “a.k.a Swazi Rooibaard” (Afropips) Landraces; Swaziland, Nkomati
 
* Swazi Skunk (SeedsMan) Swazi X Skunk #1
 
* Sweet Apollo (Reservoir) SweetTooth #3 X Apollo 11
 
* Sweet Cindy (BOG) Sweet Tooth #3 X Cinderella 99
 
* Sweet Dreams (Almighty) Lionheart X ??
 
* Sweet Dreams (KC Brains) Californian Big Bud Skunk X K.C.606
 
* [[Sweet Tooth (by Barney's Farm)|Sweet Tooth]] (Barney's Farm): Afghani x Hawaiian x Nepali
 
* [[Sweet Tooth 1.1]] (DJ Short & Spice of Life) [Sweet Pink Grapefruit X DJ's Blueberry] X Grapefruit
 
* Sweet Treat (Reeferman) Dutch Treat X Californian IBL
 
* Swiss Miss (Nirvana) Afghani X ?Ruderalis?
 
* SwissXT (KC Brains) Mr. Swiss X Double K.C. private project
 
   
== (T) ==
 
   
  +
A common myth about the kangaroo's English name is that it was a Guugu Yimithirr phrase for "I don't know" or "I don't understand".<nowiki><ref>{{cite web|title=Believe it or nuts. (Columns/Posted 11/09/99)|publisher=[[Word Detective]]|url=http://www.word-detective.com/110999.html#kangaroo|accessdate=18 June 2011}}</ref></nowiki> According to this legend, Cook and Banks were exploring the area when they happened upon the animal. They asked a nearby local what the creatures were called. The local responded "kangaroo", said to mean "I don't know/understand", which Cook then took to be the name of the creature.<nowiki><ref name=jennings/></nowiki> Anthropologist <nowiki>[[Walter Roth]]</nowiki> was trying to correct this legend as far back as in 1898, but few took note until 1972 when linguist John B. Haviland in his research with the Guugu Yimithirr people was able to fully confirm the proper etymology.<nowiki><ref name=jennings>{{cite web |last1=Jennings |first1=Ken |title=The Debunker: Where Does the Word "Kangaroo" Come From? |url=https://www.woot.com/blog/post/the-debunker-where-does-the-word-kangaroo-come-from |website=woot.com |publisher=Woot |date=7 August 2019 |accessdate=16 December 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Haviland |first=John B. |year=1974 |title=A last look at Cook's Guugu-Yimidhirr wordlist |journal=Oceania |volume=44 |issue=3 |pages=216–232 |url=http://www.anthro.ucsd.edu/~jhaviland/Publications/HavilandOceania.pdf |accessdate=13 April 2008 |doi=10.1002/j.1834-4461.1974.tb01803.x }}</ref></nowiki> There are similar, more credible stories of naming confusion, such as with the <nowiki>[[Yucatán Peninsula#Etymology|Yucatán Peninsula]].<ref name=jennings/></nowiki>
* [[T.N.R]] (KC Brains) Thai X Double K.C. 2
 
* [[Tahoe OG]] (Cali Connection): SFV ogk F3 (m) x TAHOE clone (f)
 
* [[Tangerine Dream]] (Barney's Farm): G13 x Neville's A5 Haze
 
* [[Tanzanian Magic]]: (African Seeds) Landraces; Southern Tanzania
 
* [[Taskenti]]: (Canna Biogen) Landraces; Uzbekistan
 
* [[Tasman Haze]]: (Kiwiseeds)
 
* [[Temple Haze]]: (Flying Dutchmen) Original Haze x Nepalese Hash Plant
 
* [[Thai Lights]]: (Dr. Atomic) Landraces; Thailand, Nakan Pranom X Northern Lights
 
* [[Thai Stick]] Landraces; Thailand
 
* [[Thai-Tanic]]: (Flying Dutchmen) Thai X Skunk
 
* The One: (Sannie's Seeds): Sannie's Jack x Killian
 
* Three Kings: Og kush x Headband X Sour Diesel
 
* Thumper: (Juan Moore) Trix X G13
 
* Thunder Wonder: (Reservoir) Matanuska Tundra X William's Wonder
 
* Thunder Pearl: (Reeferman) Early Pearl X Kodiak Gold
 
* Thunderfuck Diesel: (Reservoir) Matanuska Tundra X Sour Diesel
 
* Timanfaya Devil: (Afropips) [[Cape Verde X Congolese] X Nepalese] X Congolese
 
* Time Bomb: (Legends) Texada Timewarp X Blueberry
 
* Titan: (Federation) Romulan X BC Big Bud
 
* [[Top 44]]: (Homegrown Fantaseeds) Skunk No. 1 X Viking
 
* [[Top Dawg]] (Barney's Farm): Mexican Sativa / Afghan Kush
 
* Top Lady: (HD Canadian) First Lady X Top 44
 
* [[Toxic Blue]]: (Motarebel) Blue Kronic X Killian
 
* [[Trainwreck]]: (Woodhorse) Mexican X Colombian X Afghani
 
* [[Trance]]: (Dutch Passion) unknown Skunk x unknown Indica
 
* [[Transkei Green]]: (African Seeds) Landraces; South Africa, Transkei
 
* [[Tribal Vision]]: (Afropips) Malberry X [Sweet Tooth #3 X Grapefruit X Congo Nepalese]
 
* Triple Afghan Slam: (Reeferman) Combine 3 Afghani strains
 
* Trix: (Juan Moore) [Blueberry X Northern Light] X Northern Light
 
* Tropical Timewarp: (Reeferman) Punta Roja Colombian Red X African Timewarp
 
* Tropical Treat Special: (Brazilian Seed) Colombian Gold X Colombian Jack X Haze Special X Skunk #1
 
* Turtle Power: (Amsterdam Marijuana) Purple Power X Early Girl
 
* Twisted Fruit: (Motarebel) Grapefruit X [Killer Queen X NYC Diesel]
 
   
== (U) ==
 
   
* [[Ultra Skunk]] (Dutch Passion): unknown Swiss Skunk x unknown Dutch Skunk
 
* [[Uptown Girl]] (Barney's Farm): Thai x Burmese parentage
 
* [[Urban Poison]] (Nirvana Seeds): [Durban Poison x Northern Lights] x Durban Poison
 
* [[Utopia Haze]] (Barney's Farm): Afghani, North Indian and Mexican genotypes
 
   
  +
Kangaroos are often colloquially referred to as "roos".<nowiki><ref>{{cite web|title=Roo |work=[[Compact Editions of the Oxford English Dictionary|Compact Oxford English Dictionary]] |publisher=Ask Oxford.com |url=http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/roo?view=uk |accessdate=31 December 2006 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070211134324/http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/roo?view=uk |archivedate=11 February 2007 }}</ref></nowiki> Male kangaroos are called bucks, boomers, jacks, or old men; females are does, flyers, or jills; and the young ones are <nowiki>[[Joey (marsupial)|joey]]s.<ref name="sandiego">{{cite web|title=Kangaroo and Wallaby|url=http://www.sandiegozoo.org/animalbytes/t-kangaroo.html|work=San Diego Zoo|publisher=Zoological Society of San Diego|accessdate=2 October 2011|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927154255/http://www.sandiegozoo.org/animalbytes/t-kangaroo.html|archivedate=27 September 2011}}</ref> The [[collective noun]]</nowiki> for a group of kangaroos is a mob, court, or troupe.<nowiki><ref name="Kidcyber">{{cite web|last1=Sydenham |first1=S |last2=Thomas |first2=R |title=Kangaroos |url=http://www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/kanga.htm |work=Kidcyber |accessdate=2 October 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110903001135/http://www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/kanga.htm |archivedate=3 September 2011 }}</ref></nowiki>
== (V) ==
 
   
* [[Valley Queen]] (No Mercy): Everest Queen x Silver Pearl
 
* [[Vanilla Haze]] (Marshall Seeds): Blueberry Sativa x Super Silver Haze
 
* [[Vanilla Kush]] (Barney's Farm): Kashmir (f) x Kush (m)
 
* Very White (Celebrity): White Widow X Haze
 
* Viet Combo (Spice Brothers): Vietnamese X Vietnamese Black
 
* [[Vietnamese Mindfuck]] (Reeferman's Seeds): Landraces; Viet Nam {Sativa}
 
* [[Viper]] (Reeferman): Blackseed X Burmese
 
* [[Voodoo]] (Dutch Passion): Landraces; Thailand {Sativa}
 
* [[Vortex]] (Subcool): Apollo 13 X Space Queen
 
   
== (W) ==
 
   
  +
<nowiki>== Taxonomy and description ==</nowiki>
* Wakeford (Reeferman): [Skunk No. 1 X Airborne G-13] X UBC Chemo
 
* Waldo (Apothecary): Pez X Purple Cherry
 
* [[Warlock]] (Magus Genetics): Skunk No. 1 x Afghani
 
* Warpberry (Patch Works): Texada Timewarp X Purple Pineberry
 
* Warrior (Da'Bean Co.): Mango X California Indica
 
* White Cinderella (Canadian Seed Co.): BRG White Widow X Cinderella 99
 
* White Crystal (THC Seeds): White Lightning X Super Crystal
 
* White Fire: OG Kush (Fire cut) X The White Effects
 
* White Flow (Capricorn): White Widow X Flow
 
* White Grizzly (Kootenay Mountain): Dutch Treat X Nepali X Chemo
 
* [[White Haze]] (White Label Seeds)
 
* White Himalayan Haze (GN03): White Widow X Himalayan Haze
 
* White KC (KC Brains): White Widow X Afghani X KC33
 
* White Light (Soma): Bubblegum X White Widow
 
* White Light (Willy Jack): Northern Lights X White Widow
 
* White Lightning (BC Seed Co.): Northern Lights #5 X White Widow
 
* White Mr. Nice (Blue Grass): White Haze X [Mr. Nice G-13 X Hashplant]
 
* [[White OG]] (Karma Genetics: The White (f) x SFV OG Kush BX2 (m)
 
* [[White Panther]] (Ceres Seeds): (formerly known as White Smurf)
 
* [[White Rhino]] (Green House): Afghan X Brazilian X South Indian, Kerala
 
* White Rose (High Quality): Skunk X White Widow
 
* [[White Russian]] (Serious): AK-47 x White Widow
 
* White Satin (Mandala): Landraces; N. India x Punjab
 
* White Star (Capricorn): Sensi Star X White Widow
 
* White Star (Delta 9): New York City Diesel X Sensi Star
 
* White Tusk (Goodhouse): [Hawaii X Big Bud] X KGB
 
* [[White Widow]] (Green House): Brazilian X South Indian
 
* [[White Willow]] (Soma Seeds) {Indica dominant}: White Widow X Afghani Hawaiian
 
* Widow Warrior (White Widow Web): Master Widow X Durban
 
* Widowrella (Canadian Pros): Cinderella 99 X White Widow
 
* [[William's Wonder]] (Reeferman's) {Indica dominant}: Afghan phenotype
 
* [[William´s Wonder F3|William´s Wonder]](SickMeds): William´s Wonder x William´s Wonder
 
* [[Willie D]] (Reservoir): William’s Wonder X New York City Diesel
 
* Willie G (SOG): Williams Wonder X [O.G.Kush X Pure Kush]
 
* [[Willie Nelson (cannabis)|Willie Nelson]] (Barney's Farm): Vietnamese x Highland Nepalese
 
* [[Willijuana]] (Reeferman) {Sativa}: Vietnamese X Burmese
 
* Willy Jack (Willy Jack): Williams Wonder X Jack Herer
 
* Wonder 99 (Reservoir): Cinderella 99 X William’s Wonder
 
* [[Wonder Diesel]] (Reservoir): William’s Wonder X Sour Diesel
 
* [[Wonder Haze]] (Reservoir): Super Silver Haze x William’s Wonder
 
* [[Wonderberry]] (Sagarmatha) {Indica dominant}: Bubbleberry x William’s Wonder
 
* [[Wreckage]] (T.H. Seeds) {Sativa dominant}: S.A.G.E. x Trainwreck
 
   
  +
<nowiki>[[File:Kangur.rudy.drs.jpg|thumb|A male [[red kangaroo]] grazing]]</nowiki>
== (X) ==
 
   
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There are four extant species that are commonly referred to as kangaroos:
* [[Xanadu]] (Dutchgrown Seeds): Tom Hill X-18 (female) x Original Brothers Grimm DTC99 (male)
 
   
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<nowiki>* The [[red kangaroo]] (''Osphranter rufus'')<ref name="afd2020">{{cite web|title=Names List for MACROPODIDAE, Australian Faunal Directory|url=https://biodiversity.org.au/afd/taxa/MACROPODIDAE/names|publisher=Australian Biological Resources Study, Australian Department of the Environment and Energy|accessdate=1 March 2020|date=13 February 2020}}</ref> is the largest surviving [[marsupial]] anywhere in the world. It occupies the arid and semi-arid centre of the country. The highest population densities of the red kangaroo occur in the rangelands of western New South Wales. Red kangaroos are commonly mistaken as the most abundant species of kangaroo, but eastern greys actually have a larger population.<ref name=dawson2012>{{cite book|last=Dawson|first=Terence|title=Kangaroos|edition=2nd|year=2012|publisher=CSIRO Publishing|location=Collingwood, VIC}}</ref> A large male can be 2 metres (6&amp;nbsp;ft 7 in) tall and weighs 90&amp;nbsp;kg (200&amp;nbsp;lb).<ref name="reds">{{cite web|title=Red Kangaroo|url=http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/red-kangaroo/|work=NAT GEO Wild|publisher=National Geographic Society|accessdate=2 October 2011|date=11 November 2010}}</ref></nowiki>
== (Y) ==
 
   
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<nowiki>* The [[eastern grey kangaroo]] (''Macropus giganteus'')<ref name="afd2020" /> is less well-known than the red (outside Australia), but the most often seen, as its range covers the fertile eastern part of the country. The range of the eastern grey kangaroo extends from the top of the [[Cape York Peninsula]] in northern Queensland down to Victoria, as well as areas of southeastern Australia and Tasmania. Population densities of eastern grey kangaroos usually peak near 100 per km<sup>2</sup> in suitable habitats of open woodlands. Populations are more limited in areas of land clearance, such as farmland, where forest and woodland habitats are limited in size or abundance.<ref name=dawson2012 /></nowiki>
* [[Y Griega]] (Medical Seeds Co.): Amnesia x Kali Mist
 
* [[Yarkoum]] (Tiki Seed Bank): Landraces; Pakistan, Chitral Valley x “secret F1”
 
* [[Yellow Brick Wall]] (Juan Moore): Afghani X Columbian Gold
 
* [[Yumboldt]] (Sagarmatha): Landraces: Afghanistan X Landraces: Himalaya
 
   
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<nowiki>* The [[western grey kangaroo]] (''Macropus fuliginosus'')<ref name="afd2020" /> is slightly smaller again at about 54&amp;nbsp;kg (119&amp;nbsp;lb) for a large male. It is found in the southern part of Western Australia, South Australia near the coast, and the [[Murray–Darling basin]]. The highest population densities occur in the western Riverina district of New South Wales and in the western areas of the Nullarbor Plain in Western Australia. Populations may have declined, particularly in agricultural areas. The species has a high tolerance to the plant toxin [[sodium fluoroacetate]], which indicates a possible origin from the southwest region of Australia.<ref name=dawson2012 /></nowiki>
== (Z) ==
 
   
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<nowiki>* The [[antilopine kangaroo]] (''Osphranter antilopinus'')<ref name="afd2020" /> is, essentially, the far northern equivalent of the eastern grey and western grey kangaroos. It is sometimes referred to as the antilopine wallaroo, but in behaviour and habitat it is more similar to the red, eastern grey and western grey kangaroos. Like them, it is a creature of the grassy plains and woodlands, and gregarious. Its name comes from its fur, which is similar in colour and texture to that of antelopes. Characteristically, the noses of males swell behind the nostrils. This enlarges nasal passages and allows them to release more heat in hot and humid climates.<ref name=dawson2012 /></nowiki>
* [[Zagorsk]] (Canadian Seed Co.): Killer Queen X Sugar Klingon
 
* [[Zamal]] (GN03): Landrace; La Reunion, Madagascar.
 
* [[Zambian Copper]] (African Seeds): Landrace; Zambia Africa
 
* [[Zero Gravity]] (T.H. Seeds) {Indica}: Gravity x Afghan clone
 
* [[Zilvermist]] (All Star Genetics): Kali-Mist x Super Silver Haze (clone)
 
* Zombie Virus (Lineage Genetics)
 
   
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<nowiki>[[File:Sthenurus.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Palate|palatal]] view of a ''[[Sthenurus]]'' sp. skull]]</nowiki>
== See also ==
 
   
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<nowiki>In addition, there are about 50 smaller macropods closely related to the kangaroos in the family [[Macropodidae]]. Kangaroos and other macropods share a common ancestor with the [[Phalangeridae]] from the Middle [[Miocene]].<ref>{{cite journal |author=Rice, W.D.L. |title=Historical introduction to studies on the evolution and phylogeny of the Macropodidae |journal=Australian Mammalogy |volume=2 |pages=1–14 |year=1978 }}</ref> This ancestor was likely arboreal and lived in the canopies of the extensive forests that covered most of Australia at that time, when the climate was much wetter, and fed on leaves and stems.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> From the Late Miocene through the Pliocene and into the [[Pleistocene]] the climate got drier, which led to a decline of forests and expansion of grasslands. At this time, there was a radiation of macropodids characterised by enlarged body size and adaptation to the low quality grass diet with the development of [[foregut fermentation]].<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> The most numerous early macropods, the [[Balbaridae]] and the [[Bulungmayinae]], became extinct in the Late Miocene around 5–10 mya.<ref name=Tyndale2005>{{cite book |author=Tyndale-Biscoe, H |title=Life of Marsupials |publisher=CSIRO Publishing |year=2005 |page=302 |isbn=978-0-643-06257-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KqtlPZJ9y8EC&pg=PA302}}</ref> There is dispute over the relationships of the two groups to modern kangaroos and [[Potoroidae|rat-kangaroo]]s. Some argue that the balbarines were the ancestors of rat-kangaroos and the bulungmayines were the ancestors of kangaroos.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Cooke B, Kear B |title=Evolution and diversity of kangaroos (Macropodoidea, Marsupialia) |journal=Australian Mammalogy |volume=21 |pages=27–29 |year=1999 }}</ref> while others hold the contrary view.<ref>{{cite book |author=Flannery, T.F. |chapter=Phylogeny of the Macropodoidea; a study in convergence |editor1=Grigg G. |editor2=Jarman P. |editor3=Hume I.D. |title=Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos |publisher=Surrey Beatty |location=Sydney |year=1989 |isbn=978-0-949324-22-1 |pages=1–46 }}</ref> [[File:The Kongouro from New Holland (Kangaroo) NMM ZBA5754 (cropped).jpg|upright|thumb|''[[The Kongouro from New Holland]]'', a 1772 painting of a kangaroo by [[George Stubbs]]]]</nowiki>
* [[Strains]]
 
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* [[Cannabis Cup Winners]]
 
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<nowiki>The middle to late bulungmayines, ''[[Ganguroo]]'' and ''Wanburoo'' lacked digit 1 of the hind foot and digits 2 and 3 were reduced and partly under the large digit 4, much like the modern kangaroo foot. This would indicate that they were bipedal. In addition, their ankle bones had an articulation that would have prohibited much lateral movements, an adaptation for bipedal hopping.<ref name=Tyndale2005/> Species related to the modern grey kangaroos and [[wallaroo]]s begin to appear in the Pliocene. The red kangaroo appears to be the most recently evolved kangaroo, with its fossil record not going back beyond the Pleistocene era, 1–2 mya.<ref name = "Dawson 1995"/></nowiki>
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<nowiki>The first kangaroo to be exhibited in the Western world was an example shot by [[John Gore (seaman)|John Gore]], an officer on Captain Cook's ship, the [[HMS Endeavour|HMS ''Endeavour'']], in 1770.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=Captain John Gore |url=http://www.nma.gov.au/shared/libraries/attachments/friends/archive/in_the_national_museum_captain_john_gore/files/17814/Captain_John_Gore_rf.pdf |journal=FRiENDS |volume=17 |issue=2 |issn=1323-5826 |date=June 2006 |accessdate=2 October 2011 |page=18 |first=Johanna |last=Parker |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120121210124/http://www.nma.gov.au/shared/libraries/attachments/friends/archive/in_the_national_museum_captain_john_gore/files/17814/Captain_John_Gore_rf.pdf |archive-date=21 January 2012 |url-status=dead  }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Cowley|first1=Des|last2=Hubber|first2=Brian|title=Kangaroo|journal=The La Trobe Journal|year=2000|issue=66|pages=4–[https://web.archive.org/web/20190628083125/http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-66/t1-g-t2.html 5]|url=http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-66/t1-g-t2.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190628083125/http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-66/t1-g-t2.html|archive-date=28 June 2019|accessdate=2 October 2011|editor1-first=John|editor1-last=Barnes|editor2-first=Sandra|editor2-last=Burt|issn=1441-3760}}</ref> The animal was shot and its skin and skull transported back to England whereupon it was stuffed (by [[Taxidermy|taxidermists]] who had never seen the animal before) and displayed to the general public as a curiosity.  The first glimpse of a kangaroo for many 18th-century Britons was a painting by [[George Stubbs]].<ref>The "i" newspaper, 21 June 2013. page 2</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Comparison with wallabies ===</nowiki>
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Kangaroos and <nowiki>[[Wallaby|wallabies]]</nowiki> belong to the same taxonomic family (<nowiki>[[Macropodidae]]</nowiki>) and often the same genera, but kangaroos are specifically categorised into the four largest species of the family. The term wallaby is an informal designation generally used for any <nowiki>[[Macropodidae|macropod]]</nowiki> that is smaller than a kangaroo or a <nowiki>[[wallaroo]]</nowiki> that has not been designated otherwise.<nowiki><ref name="Australian Wildlife">{{cite web|title=The Kangaroo |url=http://www.australianwildlife.com.au/kangaroo.htm |accessdate=6 November 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140125064953/http://australianwildlife.com.au/kangaroo.htm |archivedate=25 January 2014 }}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>== Biology and behaviour ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{see also|Red kangaroo#Behaviour|Eastern grey kangaroo#Behaviour}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Locomotion ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Kangaroo-in-flight.jpg|right|thumb|A [[Eastern grey kangaroo#Taxonomy|Tasmanian eastern grey kangaroo]] in motion]]</nowiki>
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Kangaroos are the only large animals to use hopping as a means of <nowiki>[[Animal locomotion|locomotion]]</nowiki>. The comfortable hopping speed for a red kangaroo is about <nowiki>{{convert|20–25|kph|abbr=on}}</nowiki>, but speeds of up to <nowiki>{{convert|70|kph|abbr=on}}</nowiki> can be attained over short distances, while it can sustain a speed of <nowiki>{{convert|40|kph|abbr=on}} for nearly {{convert|2|km|abbr=on}}.<ref name="secret">{{cite book | last = Penny | first = Malcolm | title = The Secret World of Kangaroos | publisher=Raintree Steck-Vaughn  | year = 2002 | location = Austin TX | isbn = 978-0-7398-4986-6 | url= https://books.google.com/books?id=NNLpLfdP5GwC&q=%2270+km%22}}</ref></nowiki> During a hop, the powerful <nowiki>[[gastrocnemius muscle]]</nowiki>s lift the body off the ground while the smaller <nowiki>[[plantaris muscle]]</nowiki>, which attaches near the large fourth toe, is used for push-off. Seventy percent of potential energy is stored in the elastic tendons.<nowiki><ref>{{cite book|author=Jackson, S.; Vernes, K.|year=2010|title=Kangaroo: Portrait of an Extraordinary Marsupial|publisher=Allen and Unwin|pages=139–140|isbn=9781741759037}}</ref></nowiki> At slow speeds, it employs pentapedal locomotion, using its tail to form a tripod with its two <nowiki>[[forelimb]]</nowiki>s while bringing its hind feet forward. Both pentapedal walking and fast hopping are energetically costly. Hopping at moderate speeds is the most energy efficient, and a kangaroo moving above <nowiki>{{convert|15|kph|abbr=on}}</nowiki> maintains energy consistency more than similarly-sized animal running at the same speed.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki> Kangaroos are adept <nowiki>[[aquatic locomotion|swimmers]]</nowiki>, and often flee into waterways if threatened by a predator. If pursued into the water, a kangaroo may use its forepaws to hold the predator underwater so as to <nowiki>[[drowning|drown]] it.<ref name="camuseum">{{cite web|title=Kangaroos|url=http://www.nature.ca/notebooks/english/kanga.htm|work=Natural History Notebooks|publisher=Canadian Museum of Nature|accessdate=2 October 2011|date=3 May 2011}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Diet ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Kangaroos Maranoa.JPG|thumb|Kangaroos in their native grassland habitat]]</nowiki>
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<nowiki>Kangaroos have single-chambered stomachs quite unlike those of cattle and sheep, which have four compartments.<ref name=Hume1984>{{cite journal | last = Hume | first = I.D. |year = 1984 | title = Principal Features of Digestion in Kangaroos | journal = Proceedings of the Nutritional Society of Australia | volume = 9 | url=http://apjcn.nhri.org.tw/server/apjcn/ProcNutSoc/1980-1989/1984/1984%20p76-81.pdf | pages = 76–81 }}</ref><ref name=VB>{{cite book |author=Romer, Alfred Sherwood|author2=Parsons, Thomas S.|year=1977 |title=The Vertebrate Body |publisher=Holt-Saunders International |location= Philadelphia, PA|page= 347|isbn= 978-0-03-910284-5}}</ref> They sometimes regurgitate the vegetation they have eaten, chew it as [[cud]], and then swallow it again for final digestion. However, this is a different, more strenuous, activity than it is in [[ruminant]]s, and does not take place as frequently.<ref name=Vendl2017>{{cite journal | author = Vendl, C. | display-authors = etal | year = 2017 | title = Merycism in western grey (''Macropus fuliginosus'') and red kangaroos (''Macropus rufus'') | journal = Mammalian Biology | volume = 86 | pages = 21–26 | doi = 10.1016/j.mambio.2017.03.005| doi-access = free }}</ref></nowiki>
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Different species of kangaroos have different diets, although all are strict <nowiki>[[herbivores]]</nowiki>. The eastern grey kangaroo is predominantly a <nowiki>[[Grazing|grazer]]</nowiki>, and eats a wide variety of grasses, whereas some other species such as the red kangaroo include significant amounts of <nowiki>[[shrub]]</nowiki>s in their diets. Smaller species of kangaroos also consume <nowiki>[[hypogeal]]</nowiki> fungi. Many species are <nowiki>[[nocturnal]],<ref name="archive">{{cite web|last=McGuinness|first=Keith|title=Re: Kangaroos|url=http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/dec96/845059250.Zo.r.html|work=MadSci Network|accessdate=2 October 2011|date=25 November 1996}}</ref> and [[crepuscular]],<ref name="colzoo">{{cite web|title=From Boomers to Blue fliers: Fun facts About Kangaroos!!|url=http://www.colszoo.org/animalareas/austral/kangfact.html|work=Columbus Zoo and Aquarium|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20040226032907/http://www.colszoo.org/animalareas/austral/kangfact.html|archivedate=26 February 2004}}</ref><ref name="nocturn2">{{cite web|url=http://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/kangaroos.html |title=About Australia: Kangaroos |publisher=Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade |accessdate=6 June 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120527162537/http://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/kangaroos.html |archivedate=27 May 2012 }}</ref></nowiki> usually spending the hot days resting in shade, and the cool evenings, nights and mornings moving about and feeding.
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Because of its grazing habits, the kangaroo has developed specialized teeth that are rare among mammals. Its <nowiki>[[incisor]]</nowiki>s are able to crop grass close to the ground and its <nowiki>[[molar (tooth)|molar]]</nowiki>s chop and grind the grass. Since the two sides of the lower jaw are not joined or fused together, the lower incisors are farther apart, giving the kangaroo a wider bite. The <nowiki>[[silica]]</nowiki> in grass is abrasive, so kangaroo molars are ground down and they actually move forward in the mouth before they eventually fall out, and are replaced by new teeth that grow in the back.<nowiki><ref>[http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_192.htm Kangaroo: the teeth] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140417103429/http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_192.htm |date=17 April 2014 }}</ref></nowiki> This process is known as <nowiki>[[polyphyodont]]</nowiki>y and, amongst other mammals, only occurs in elephants and <nowiki>[[manatees]]</nowiki>.
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<nowiki>==== Absence of digestive methane release ====</nowiki>
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Despite having herbivorous diets similar to <nowiki>[[ruminant]]</nowiki>s such as cattle, which release large quantities of digestive <nowiki>[[methane]] through [[Breathing|exhaling]] and [[eructation]]</nowiki> (burping), kangaroos release virtually none. The <nowiki>[[hydrogen]] byproduct of [[fermentation]]</nowiki> is instead converted into <nowiki>[[acetate]]</nowiki>, which is then used to provide further energy. Scientists are interested in the possibility of transferring the bacteria responsible for this process from kangaroos to cattle, since the <nowiki>[[greenhouse gas]]</nowiki> effect of methane is 23 times greater than <nowiki>[[carbon dioxide]] per molecule.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Vendl |first1=C. |last2=Clauss |first2=M. |last3=Stewart |first3=M. |last4=Leggett |first4=K. |last5=Hummel |first5=J. |last6=Kreuzer |first6=M. |last7=Munn |first7=A. |title=Decreasing methane yield with increasing food intake keeps daily methane emissions constant in two foregut fermenting marsupials, the western grey kangaroo and red kangaroo |journal=Journal of Experimental Biology |date=4 November 2015 |volume=218 |issue=21 |pages=3425–3434 |doi=10.1242/jeb.128165 |pmid=26538176 |doi-access=free }}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Social and sexual behavior ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Group of Macropus fuliginosus Darling Range 05010.JPG|thumb|right|[[Western grey kangaroo]]s]]</nowiki>
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<nowiki>Groups of kangaroos are called ''mobs'', ''courts'' or ''troupes'', which usually have 10 or more kangaroos in them. Living in mobs can provide protection for some of the weaker members of the group.<ref name="Kidcyber"/> The size and stability of mobs vary between geographic regions,<ref name = "McCullough 2000">{{harvnb|McCullough|2000}}</ref> with eastern Australia having larger and more stable aggregations than in arid areas farther west.<ref name="McCullough 2000"/> Larger aggregations display high amounts of interactions and complex social structures, comparable to that of [[ungulate]]s.<ref name="McCullough 2000"/> One common behavior is nose touching and sniffing, which mostly occurs when an individual joins a group.<ref name="Dawson 1995">{{cite book |author=Dawson, Terence J. |title=Kangaroos: Biology of the Largest Marsupials |publisher=Cornell University Press/Comstock Publishing |year=1995 |isbn=978-0-8014-8262-5 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/kangaroosbiology00daws }}</ref> The kangaroo performing the sniffing gains much information from smell cues. This behavior enforces social cohesion without consequent aggression. During mutual sniffing, if one kangaroo is smaller, it will hold its body closer to the ground and its head will quiver, which serves as a possible form of submission.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> Greetings between males and females are common, with larger males being the most involved in meeting females. Most other non-antagonistic behavior occurs between mothers and their young. Mother and young reinforce their bond though grooming. A mother will groom her young while it is suckling or after it is finished suckling.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/>  A joey will nuzzle its mother's pouch if it wants access to it.</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Anchor|Sexual behavior}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[Animal sexual behavior|Sexual activity]]</nowiki> of kangaroos consists of consort pairs.<nowiki><ref name = "Gansloßer 1995"/> [[Estrus|Oestrous]]</nowiki> females roam widely and attract the attention of males with conspicuous signals.<nowiki><ref name = "Gansloßer 1995">{{cite journal |author=Gansloßer, Udo |title=Courtship behaviour in Macropodoidea (kangaroos, wallabies and rat kangaroos)&amp;nbsp;– phylogenetic and ecological influences on ritualization |journal=Mammal Review |volume=25 |issue=3 |pages=131–157 |year=1995 |doi=10.1111/j.1365-2907.1995.tb00453.x }}</ref></nowiki> A male will monitor a female and follow her every movement. He sniffs her urine to see if she is in oestrus, a process exhibiting the <nowiki>[[flehmen response]]</nowiki>. The male will then proceed to approach her slowly to avoid alarming her.<nowiki><ref name = "McCullough 2000"/></nowiki> If the female does not run away, the male will continue by licking, pawing, and scratching her, and copulation will follow.<nowiki><ref name = "McCullough 2000"/></nowiki> After copulation is over, the male will move on to another female. Consort pairing may take several days and the copulation is also long. Thus, a consort pair is likely to attract the attention of a rival male.<nowiki><ref name = "Gansloßer 1995"/></nowiki> As larger males are tending bonds with females near oestrus, smaller males will tend to females that are farther from oestrus.<nowiki><ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> [[dominance (ethology)|Dominant]]</nowiki> males can avoid having to sort through females to determine their reproductive status by searching for tending bonds held by the largest male they can displace without a fight.<nowiki><ref name = "McCullough 2000"/></nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:- fighting red kangaroos 1.jpg|thumb|Two male [[red kangaroo]]s boxing]]</nowiki>
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Fighting has been described in all species of kangaroos. Fights between kangaroos can be brief or long and ritualised.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki> In highly competitive situations, such as males fighting for access to oestrous females or at limited drinking spots, the fights are brief.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki> Both sexes will fight for drinking spots, but long, ritualised fighting or "boxing" is largely done by males. Smaller males fight more often near females in oestrus, while the large males in consorts do not seem to get involved. Ritualised fights can arise suddenly when males are grazing together. However, most fights are preceded by two males scratching and grooming each other.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki> One or both of them will adopt a high standing posture, with one male issuing a challenge by grasping the other male's neck with its forepaw. Sometimes, the challenge will be declined. Large males often reject challenges by smaller males. During fighting, the combatants adopt a high standing posture and paw at each other's heads, shoulders and chests. They will also lock forearms and wrestle and push each other as well as balance on their tails to kick each other in the abdomen.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki>
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Brief fights are similar, except there is no forearm locking. The losing combatant seems to use kicking more often, perhaps to parry the thrusts of the eventual winner. A winner is decided when a kangaroo breaks off the fight and retreats. Winners are able to push their opponents backwards or down to the ground. They also seem to grasp their opponents when they break contact and push them away.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki> The initiators of the fights are usually the winners. These fights may serve to establish dominance hierarchies among males, as winners of fights have been seen to displace their opponent from resting sites later in the day.<nowiki><ref name="Dawson 1995"/></nowiki> Dominant males may also pull grass to intimidate subordinate ones.<nowiki><ref name = "McCullough 2000"/></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Predators ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>Kangaroos have a few natural [[predator]]s. The [[thylacine]], considered by palaeontologists to have once been a major natural predator of the kangaroo, is now [[Extinction|extinct]]. Other extinct predators included the [[marsupial lion]], ''[[Megalania]]'' and ''[[Wonambi]]''. However, with the arrival of humans in Australia at least 50,000 years ago and the introduction of the [[dingo]] about 5,000 years ago, kangaroos have had to adapt. <!--The use of dingoes, and later hunting dogs by Europeans, to hunt kangaroos has resulted in most kangaroos having an enmity for dogs; citation needed--> [[Wedge-tailed eagle]]s and other raptors usually eat kangaroo [[carrion]]. [[Goanna]]s and other carnivorous reptiles also pose a danger to smaller kangaroo species when other food sources are lacking. <!--crocodiles?? unlikely...--></nowiki>
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Along with dingoes, <nowiki>[[Invasive species, Australia|introduced species]]</nowiki> such as foxes, <nowiki>[[feral cat]]</nowiki>s, and both domestic and feral dogs, pose a threat to kangaroo populations. Kangaroos and wallabies are adept <nowiki>[[Aquatic locomotion|swimmers]]</nowiki>, and often flee into waterways if presented with the option. If pursued into the water, a large kangaroo may use its forepaws to hold the predator underwater so as to <nowiki>[[Drowning|drown]] it.<ref name="camuseum"/></nowiki> Another defensive <nowiki>[[Tactic (method)|tactic]]</nowiki> described by witnesses is catching the attacking dog<!--Just dogs, or other predators as well?--> with the forepaws and <nowiki>[[disembowel]]</nowiki>ling it with the hind legs.
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<nowiki>=== Adaptations ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Baby kangaroo.JPG|thumb|A baby kangaroo (joey)]]</nowiki>
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Kangaroos have developed a number of adaptations to a dry, infertile country and highly variable climate. As with all <nowiki>[[marsupial]]</nowiki>s, the young are born at a very early stage of development—after a <nowiki>[[gestation]]</nowiki> of 31–36 days. At this stage, only the forelimbs are somewhat developed, to allow the newborn to climb to the <nowiki>[[Pouch (marsupial)|pouch]]</nowiki> and attach to a <nowiki>[[teat]]</nowiki>. In comparison, a human <nowiki>[[embryo]]</nowiki> at a similar stage of development would be about seven weeks old, and <nowiki>[[Premature birth|premature babies]]</nowiki> born at less than 23 weeks are usually not mature enough to survive. When the joey is born, it is about the size of a <nowiki>[[Phaseolus lunatus|lima bean]]</nowiki>. The joey will usually stay in the pouch for about nine months (180–320 days for the Western Grey) before starting to leave the pouch for small periods of time. It is usually fed by its mother until reaching 18 months.
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The female kangaroo is usually pregnant in permanence, except on the day she gives birth; however, she has the ability to freeze the development of an embryo until the previous <nowiki>[[Joey (marsupial)|joey]]</nowiki> is able to leave the pouch. This is known as <nowiki>[[embryonic diapause]]</nowiki>, and will occur in times of drought and in areas with poor food sources. The composition of the milk produced by the mother varies according to the needs of the joey. In addition, the mother is able to produce two different kinds of milk simultaneously for the newborn and the older joey still in the pouch.
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Unusually, during a dry period, males will not produce sperm, and females will conceive only if enough rain has fallen to produce a large quantity of green vegetation.<nowiki><ref name="animal">{{cite book | last = Burnie | first = David |author2=Don E. Wilson | title = Animal | publisher=DK | year = 2001 | location = New York NY | pages = 99–101 | isbn = 978-0-7894-7764-4}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Kaenguru Hinterfuss-drawing.jpg|thumb|left|The hind leg of a kangaroo]]</nowiki> Kangaroos and wallabies have large, elastic tendons in their hind legs. They store elastic strain energy in the <nowiki>[[tendon]]</nowiki>s of their large hind legs, providing most of the energy required for each hop by the spring action of the tendons rather than by any muscular effort.<nowiki><ref name="tendons & hopping">{{cite book| last=Dawson| first=Terence J. (Professor UNSW)| title=Kangaroos: Biology of the largest marsupials| year=1998| publisher=Comstock Pub. Associates| location=Ithaca, N.Y.| isbn=9780801482625| pages=7–11| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KNxIlprcmTYC&q=ancestors+of+kangaroos&pg=PA6| edition=2nd| accessdate=3 August 2013| format=Paperback}}</ref></nowiki> This is true in all animal species which have muscles connected to their skeletons through elastic elements such as tendons, but the effect is more pronounced in kangaroos.
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There is also a link between the hopping action and breathing: as the feet leave the ground, air is expelled from the lungs; bringing the feet forward ready for landing refills the lungs, providing further energy efficiency. Studies of kangaroos and <nowiki>[[Wallaby|wallabies]]</nowiki> have demonstrated, beyond the minimum energy expenditure required to hop at all, increased speed requires very little extra effort (much less than the same speed increase in, say, a horse, dog or human), and the extra energy is required to carry extra weight. For kangaroos, the key benefit of hopping is not speed to escape predators—the top speed of a kangaroo is no higher than that of a similarly sized quadruped, and the Australian native predators are in any case less fearsome than those of other countries—but economy: in an infertile country with highly variable weather patterns, the ability of a kangaroo to travel long distances at moderately high speed in search of food sources is crucial to survival.
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New research has revealed that a kangaroo's tail acts as a third leg rather than just a balancing strut. Kangaroos have a unique three-stage walk where they plant their front legs and tail first, then push off their tail, followed lastly by the back legs. The propulsive force of the tail is equal to that of both the front and hind legs combined and performs as much work as what a human leg walking can at the same speed.<nowiki><ref>{{cite news|title=Kangaroos use tail like a leg to walk|url=http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2014/07/kangaroos-use-tail-to-walk|accessdate=18 November 2014|website=Australian Geographic|date=2 July 2014}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>A [[DNA sequencing]] project of the [[genome]] of a member of the kangaroo family, the [[tammar wallaby]], was started in 2004. It was a collaboration between Australia (mainly funded by the [[Victoria (Australia)|State of Victoria]]) and the [[National Institutes of Health]] in the US.<ref name="genome">{{Cite press release|author=Spencer, Geoff |title=Kangaroo Hops in Line for Genome Sequencing |url=http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jun2004/nhgri-08.htm |work=National Human Genome Research Institute |publisher=National Institutes of Health |accessdate=2 October 2011 |date=8 June 2004 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002020057/http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jun2004/nhgri-08.htm |archivedate=2 October 2011 }}</ref> The tammar's genome was fully sequenced in 2011.<ref name="Renfree/Papenfuss">{{cite journal |author=Renfree M. B. |author2=Papenfuss, A. T. |author3=Deakin, J. E. |display-authors=etal | title=Genome sequence of an Australian kangaroo, ''Macropus eugenii'', provides insight into the evolution of mammalian reproduction and development.| journal=Genome Biology| volume=12| issue=8| pages=R81| pmid=21854559| doi=10.1186/gb-2011-12-8-r81| pmc=3277949 | date=19 August 2011}}</ref> The genome of a marsupial such as the kangaroo is of great interest to scientists studying [[comparative genomics]], because marsupials are at an ideal degree of evolutionary divergence from humans: [[mouse|mice]] are too close and have not developed many different functions, while birds are genetically too remote. The dairy industry could also benefit from this project.<ref>{{cite journal|title=The tammar wallaby: A model to examine endocrine and local control of lactation|journal=IUBMB Life|last1=Brennan|first1=A. J.|last2=Sharp|first2=J. A.|last3=Digby|first3=M. R.|last4=Nicholas|first4=K. R.|volume=59|issue=3|pages=146–150|year=2007|doi=10.1080/15216540701335724|doi-access=free|pmid=17487685}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Blindness ===</nowiki>
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Eye disease<!--Proper name(s)?--> is rare but not new among kangaroos. The first official report of kangaroo blindness took place in 1994, in central <nowiki>[[New South Wales]]</nowiki>. The following year, reports of blind kangaroos appeared in Victoria and South Australia. By 1996, the disease had spread "across the desert to Western Australia".<nowiki><ref name=nwf/></nowiki> Australian authorities were concerned the disease could spread to other livestock and possibly humans. Researchers at the Australian Animal Health Laboratories in <nowiki>[[Geelong]]</nowiki> detected a virus called the Wallal virus in two species of <nowiki>[[midge]]</nowiki>s, believed to have been the carriers.<nowiki><ref>{{cite journal |last=Hooper |first=P |title=Kangaroo blindness and some other new viral diseases in Australia |journal=Australian Veterinary Journal |volume=77 |issue=8 |pages=514–5 |date=August 1999 |url=http://www.ava.com.au/avj/9908/99080514.pdf |accessdate=31 December 2006 |doi=10.1111/j.1751-0813.1999.tb12122.x |pmid=10494397 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060917145454/http://www.ava.com.au/avj/9908/99080514.pdf |archivedate=17 September 2006 |url-status=dead  }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1071/EC87p36 | title = Viruses on the hop | journal=Ecos | issue = 87 |date=Autumn 1996 | author1 = <!-- Please add first missing authors to populate metadata. --> | volume=1996 | page=36}}</ref> [[Veterinarians]]</nowiki> also discovered fewer than 3% of kangaroos exposed to the virus developed blindness.<nowiki><ref name=nwf>{{cite web | last = Harrison | first = George | title = Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Kangaroos | date = September–October 1997 | publisher=National Wildlife Federation | archiveurl  = https://web.archive.org/web/20051230075601/http://www.nwf.org/internationalwildlife/kangaroo.html | archivedate = 30 December 2005 | url = http://www.nwf.org/internationalwildlife/kangaroo.html}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Reproduction and life cycle ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{see also|Red kangaroo#Reproduction|Eastern grey kangaroo#Reproduction}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Joey in pouch.jpg|thumb|A newborn joey sucking on a teat in the pouch]]</nowiki>
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Kangaroo reproduction is similar to that of <nowiki>[[opossum]]</nowiki>s. The egg (still contained in the shell membrane, a few micrometres thick, and with only a small quantity of yolk within it) descends from the <nowiki>[[ovary]] into the [[uterus]]</nowiki>. There it is fertilised and quickly develops into a <nowiki>[[neonate]]</nowiki>. Even in the largest kangaroo species (the <nowiki>[[red kangaroo]]</nowiki>), the neonate emerges after only 33 days. Usually, only one young is born at a time. It is blind, hairless, and only a few centimetres long; its hindlegs are mere stumps; it instead uses its more developed forelegs to climb its way through the thick fur on its mother's <nowiki>[[abdomen]]</nowiki> into the pouch, which takes about three to five minutes. Once in the pouch, it fastens onto one of the four teats and starts to feed. Almost immediately, the mother's sexual cycle starts again. Another egg descends into the uterus and she becomes sexually receptive. Then, if she mates and a second egg is fertilised, its development is temporarily halted. This is known as <nowiki>[[embryonic diapause]]</nowiki>, and will occur in times of drought and in areas with poor food sources. Meanwhile, the neonate in the pouch grows rapidly. After about 190 days, the baby (<nowiki>[[Marsupial#Early development|joey]]</nowiki>) is sufficiently large and developed to make its full emergence out of the pouch, after sticking its head out for a few weeks until it eventually feels safe enough to fully emerge. From then on, it spends increasing time in the outside world and eventually, after about 235 days, it leaves the pouch for the last time.<nowiki><ref>[http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_193.htm Evolution of Biodiversity], BCB705 Biodiversity, University of the Western Cape</ref> The [[Life expectancy|lifespan]]</nowiki> of kangaroos averages at six years in the wild<nowiki><ref name="patricia">{{Cite book|last =Miller-Schroeder|first =Patricia |title =Kangaroos|series=The Untamed World|publisher=Raintree Steck-Vaughn|year =2002|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zO_YyJfjK00C&q=kangaroo++lifespan|isbn =978-0-7398-4972-9}}</ref></nowiki>to in excess of 20 years in captivity, varying by the species.<nowiki><ref name="park">{{cite web|url=http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au/education/factfiles/06.htm |title=Kangaroo |publisher=Parks Victoria |accessdate=20 February 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110208012253/http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au/education/factfiles/06.htm |archivedate=8 February 2011 }}</ref></nowiki> Most individuals, however, do not reach maturity in the wild.<nowiki><ref name="nowak">{{</nowiki>Cite book|last =Nowak|first =Ronald M. |title =Walker's mammals of the world|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press|volume=2|year =1999|isbn =978-0-8018-5789-8|url=<nowiki>https://books.google.com/books?id=T37sFCl43E8C&q=kangaroo+average+life+span+wild&pg=PA125</nowiki>
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<nowiki>}}</ref><ref name="giganteus">{{cite web|url=http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Macropus_giganteus.html|title=Macropus giganteus|last2= Wund |last1= Joo |first2=Matthew|first1=Michael S.|publisher=Animal Diversity Web, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology|accessdate=20 February 2011}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>== Interaction with humans ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Ridpath's Universal history - an account of the origin, primitive condition and ethnic development of the great races of mankind, and of the principal events in the evolution and progress of the (14583958439).jpg|thumb|[[Aboriginal Australians]] hunting kangaroos]]</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[Image:StateLibQld 1 100472.jpg|right|thumb|A kangaroo in a domestic setting, [[Queensland]], Australia, circa 1900–1910]]</nowiki>
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The kangaroo has always been a very important animal for <nowiki>[[Aboriginal Australians]], for its [[Kangaroo meat|meat]]</nowiki>, hide, bone, and <nowiki>[[tendon]]</nowiki>. Kangaroo hides were also sometimes used for recreation; in particular there are accounts of some tribes (<nowiki>[[Gunai people|Kurnai]]</nowiki>) using stuffed <nowiki>[[kangaroo scrotum]]</nowiki> as a ball for the traditional football game of <nowiki>[[marngrook]]</nowiki>. In addition, there were important <nowiki>[[Dreaming (spirituality)|Dreaming stories]]</nowiki> and ceremonies involving the kangaroo. Aherrenge is a current kangaroo dreaming site in the <nowiki>[[Northern Territory]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Aherrenge Road|url=http://www.ntlis.nt.gov.au/placenames/view.jsp?id=24029|work=Northern Territory Land Information System|publisher=Northern Territory Government|accessdate=2 October 2011}}</ref></nowiki>
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Unlike many of the smaller macropods, kangaroos have fared well since <nowiki>[[History of Australia|European settlement]]</nowiki>. European settlers cut down forests to create vast grasslands for <nowiki>[[Domestic sheep|sheep]]</nowiki> and cattle grazing, added stock watering points in arid areas, and have substantially reduced the number of dingoes.
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Kangaroos are shy and retiring by nature, and in normal circumstances present no threat to humans.  In 2003, Lulu, an eastern grey which had been hand-reared, saved a farmer's life by alerting family members to his location when he was injured by a falling tree branch. She received the <nowiki>[[RSPCA Australia]]</nowiki> National Animal Valour Award on 19 May 2004.<nowiki><ref>{{cite news | last = Leung | first = Chee Chee | title =Lulu the kangaroo hops to the rescue |work=The Age |location=Australia |date= 23 September 2003| url = http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/09/22/1064082926928.html?from=storyrhs| accessdate =10 January 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title =Life-saving kangaroo wins award |publisher=BBC News   |date= 29 April 2004| url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3667733.stm| accessdate =10 January 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Skippy to the rescue|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3127814.stm|accessdate=2 October 2011|publisher=BBC News|date=22 September 2003}}</ref></nowiki>
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There are very few records of kangaroos attacking humans without provocation; however, several such unprovoked attacks in 2004 spurred fears of a <nowiki>[[rabies]]</nowiki>-like disease possibly affecting the marsupials. The only reliably documented case of a fatality from a kangaroo attack occurred in New South Wales in 1936. A hunter was killed when he tried to rescue his two dogs from a heated fray. Other suggested causes for erratic and dangerous kangaroo behaviour include extreme thirst and hunger. In July 2011, a male red kangaroo attacked a 94-year-old woman in her own backyard as well as her son and two police officers responding to the situation. The kangaroo was capsicum sprayed (pepper sprayed) and later put down after the attack.<nowiki><ref>{{cite news|title=Rogue kangaroo attacks 94-year-old Phyllis Johnson|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-14287357|accessdate=2 October 2011|publisher=BBC News|date=26 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Pepper-sprayed kangaroo put down|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-07-27/pepper-sprayed-roo-put-down/2813022|accessdate=2 October 2011|publisher=ABC News|date=27 July 2011}}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>=== Conflict with vehicles ===</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Kangaroo Sign at Stuart Highway.jpg|upright|left|thumb|A "kangaroo crossing" sign on an Australian highway]]</nowiki>
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A collision with a vehicle is capable of killing a kangaroo. Kangaroos dazzled by headlights or startled by engine noise often leap in front of cars. Since kangaroos in mid-bound can reach speeds of around 50<nowiki>&nbsp;km/h (31&</nowiki>nbsp;mph) and are relatively heavy, the force of impact can be severe. Small vehicles may be destroyed, while larger vehicles may suffer engine damage. The risk of harm or death to vehicle occupants is greatly increased if the <nowiki>[[windscreen]]</nowiki> is the point of impact. As a result, "kangaroo crossing" signs are commonplace in Australia.
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Vehicles that frequent isolated roads, where roadside assistance may be scarce, are often fitted with "<nowiki>[[Bull bar|roo bar]]</nowiki>s" to minimise damage caused by collision. <nowiki>[[Hood (vehicle)|Bonnet]]</nowiki>-mounted devices, designed to scare wildlife off the road with <nowiki>[[ultrasound]]</nowiki> and other methods, have been devised and marketed.
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If a female is the victim of a collision, animal welfare groups ask that her pouch be checked for any surviving joey, in which case it may be removed to a wildlife sanctuary or veterinary surgeon for <nowiki>[[Wildlife rehabilitation|rehabilitation]]</nowiki>. Likewise, when an adult kangaroo is injured in a collision, a <nowiki>[[Veterinary surgeon|vet]], the [[RSPCA Australia]] or the [[National Parks and Wildlife Service (South Australia)|National Parks and Wildlife Service]]</nowiki> can be consulted for instructions on proper care. In New South Wales, rehabilitation of kangaroos is carried out by volunteers from <nowiki>[[NSW Wildlife Information and Rescue Service|WIRES]]</nowiki>.  Council road signs often list phone numbers for callers to report injured animals.
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<nowiki>== Emblems and popular culture ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Main|Kangaroo emblems and popular culture}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Australian Coat of Arms.png|thumb|A kangaroo and an emu feature on the [[Australian coat of arms]]]]</nowiki>
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The kangaroo is a recognisable symbol of Australia. The kangaroo and <nowiki>[[emu]]</nowiki> feature on the <nowiki>[[Australian coat of arms]]</nowiki>.  Kangaroos have also been featured on coins, most notably the five kangaroos on the <nowiki>[[Australian one dollar coin]].  The [[Australian Made logo]]</nowiki> consists of a golden kangaroo in a green triangle to show that a product is grown or made in Australia.
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Registered <nowiki>[[Trademark|trademarks]]</nowiki> of early Australian companies using the kangaroo included Yung, Schollenberger & Co. Walla Walla Brand leather and skins (1890); Arnold V. Henn (1892) whose emblem showed a family of kangaroos playing with a <nowiki>[[skipping rope]]</nowiki>; Robert Lascelles & Co. linked the speed of the animal with its <nowiki>[[velocipede]]</nowiki>s (1896); while some overseas manufacturers, like that of "The Kangaroo" <nowiki>[[match|safety matches]]</nowiki> (made in Japan) of the early 1900s, also adopted the symbol. Even today, Australia's national airline, <nowiki>[[Qantas]]</nowiki>, uses a bounding kangaroo for its logo.<nowiki><ref name=":0">{{Citation | author1=Cozzolino, Mimmo | author2=Rutherford, G. Fysh (Graeme Fysh), 1947- | title=Symbols of Australia | date=2000 | page=62 | publisher=Mimmo Cozzolino | edition=20th anniversary | isbn=978-0-646-40309-0 | author1-link=Mimmo Cozzolino }}</ref></nowiki>
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The kangaroo and wallaby feature predominantly in Australian sports teams names and mascots. Examples include the <nowiki>[[Australian national rugby league team]]</nowiki> (the Kangaroos) and the <nowiki>[[Australian national rugby union team]]</nowiki> (the Wallabies). In a nation-wide competition held in 1978 for the <nowiki>[[1982 Commonwealth Games|XII Commonwealth Games]]</nowiki> by the Games Australia Foundation Limited in 1982, Hugh Edwards' design was chosen; a simplified form of six thick stripes arranged in pairs extending from along the edges of a triangular centre represent both the kangaroo in full flight, and a stylised "A" for Australia.<nowiki><ref name=":0">{{Citation | author1=Cozzolino, Mimmo | author2=Rutherford, G. Fysh (Graeme Fysh), 1947- | title=Symbols of Australia | date=2000 | page=62 | publisher=Mimmo Cozzolino | edition=20th anniversary | isbn=978-0-646-40309-0 | author1-link=Mimmo Cozzolino }}</ref></nowiki>
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<nowiki>Kangaroos are well represented in films, television, books, toys and souvenirs around the world. ''[[Skippy the Bush Kangaroo]]'' was a popular 1960s Australian children's television series about a fictional pet kangaroo. Kangaroos are featured in the [[Rolf Harris]] song "[[Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport]]" and several Christmas carols.</nowiki>
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<nowiki>== Meat ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Main|Kangaroo meat}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>[[File:Kangaroo Meat.jpg|thumb|right|Kangaroo meat on sale in Melbourne]]</nowiki>
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Historically, the kangaroo has been a source of food for <nowiki>[[indigenous Australians]]</nowiki>. Kangaroo meat is high in <nowiki>[[protein]]</nowiki> and low in fat (about 2%). Kangaroo meat has a high concentration of <nowiki>[[conjugated linoleic acid]]</nowiki> (CLA) compared with other foods, and is a rich source of vitamins and minerals.<nowiki><ref name="Macro Meats Australia">{{cite web|title=Nutrition |url=http://www.macromeats.com.au/Nutrition/AmazingNutritionFacts.aspx |accessdate=6 November 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131101083733/http://www.macromeats.com.au/Nutrition/AmazingNutritionFacts.aspx |archivedate=1 November 2013 }}</ref></nowiki> Low fat diets rich in CLA have been studied for their potential in reducing obesity and atherosclerosis.<nowiki><ref name = SMH20070926>{{Cite news|url = http://www.smh.com.au/news/environment/an-industry-thats-under-the-gun/2007/09/25/1190486311919.html?page=fullpage |title = An industry that's under the gun| date = 26 September 2007|last = Dow|first = Steve|work=The Sydney Morning Herald |accessdate =19 August 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Sinclair AJ, O'Dea K, Dunstan G, Ireland PD, Niall M |s2cid=4001525 |title=Effects on plasma lipids and fatty acid composition of very low fat diets enriched with fish or kangaroo meat |journal=Lipids |volume=22 |issue=7 |pages=523–9 |date=July 1987 |pmid=3626779 |doi=10.1007/BF02540369 }}</ref></nowiki>
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Most kangaroo meat is currently sourced from wild animals as a byproduct of population control programs.<nowiki><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.daytondailynews.com/news/national/students-served-kangaroo-meat-chili-school-without-their-knowledge/xmjhutJRQeXeaHwwWaI9rO/|title=Students served kangaroo meat in chili at school without their knowledge|last=Shelby Lin Erdman|first=Cox Media Group National Content Desk|website=daytondailynews|access-date=20 February 2019}}</ref></nowiki> Kangaroos are hunted by licensed shooters in accordance with a strict code of practice and are protected by state and federal legislation.<nowiki><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/11/wildlife-watch-kangaroo-hunting-controversy-australia/|title=Australians Hunt Kangaroos Commercially. Does It Make Sense?|date=21 November 2017|website=National Geographic News|access-date=20 February 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://blogs.reuters.com/photographers-blog/2013/04/03/a-necessary-evil-the-kangaroo-cull/|title=A necessary evil – the kangaroo cull|last=Gray|first=David|date=3 April 2013|website=Reuters Blogs|access-date=20 February 2019}}</ref></nowiki>
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Kangaroo meat is exported to many countries around the world.
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<nowiki>== See also ==</nowiki>
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* <nowiki>{{annotated link|BionicKangaroo}}</nowiki> – biomimetic robot
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* <nowiki>{{annotated link|Boxing kangaroo}}</nowiki> (symbol)
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* <nowiki>{{annotated link|Embryonic diapause}}</nowiki>
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* <nowiki>{{annotated link|Kangaroo court}}</nowiki> (mock justice)
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* <nowiki>{{annotated link|Kangaroo industry}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>== References ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Reflist|30em}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>== Further reading ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{refbegin|30em}}</nowiki>
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* <nowiki>{{cite book |last1=McCullough |first1=Dale R. |last2=McCullough |first2=Yvette |title=Kangaroos in Outback Australia |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-231-11916-0 |ref={{harvid|McCullough|2000}}}}</nowiki>
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* <nowiki>{{cite book |last1=Flannery | author1link = Tim Flannery|title=Tree Kangaroos: A Curious Natural History |publisher=Reed Books |location=Melbourne |year=1996 |isbn=978-0-7301-0492-6 |first1=Timothy Fridtjof |last2=Martin |first2=Roger }}</nowiki>
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* <nowiki>{{cite book |author=Underhill D. |title=Australia's Dangerous Creatures |publisher=[[Reader's Digest]] |location=Sydney NSW |year=1993 |isbn=978-0-86438-018-0 }}</nowiki>
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* <nowiki>{{cite book |first=Michael |last=Archer| author1link =Mike Archer (paleontologist) |title=The Kangaroo |publisher=[[Kevin Weldon Press]] |location=Sydney NSW |year=1985 |isbn=978-0-949708-22-9 }}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{refend}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>== External links ==</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Commons|Macropus}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Wiktionary|kangaroo}}</nowiki>
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<nowiki>* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lCKc8tURtc Video of Kangaroo giving Birth]</nowiki>
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<nowiki>{{Diprotodontia|M.}}</nowiki>
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Revision as of 07:32, 19 October 2020

{{short description|Marsupial of the family Macropodidae indigenous to Australia}}

{{About|the animal|the kangaroo as a food|Kangaroo meat|other meanings|Kangaroo (disambiguation)}}

{{pp-move-indef}}

{{pp-semi-indef}}

{{Use Australian English|date=August 2015}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}

{{Automatic taxobox

| name = Kangaroo

| fossil_range = Early [[Miocene]] – Present

| image = Kangaroo Australia 01 11 2008 - retouch.JPG

| image_caption = A female [[red kangaroo]]

| taxon = Macropodidae

| authority = [[John Edward Gray|Gray]], 1821

}}


The '''kangaroo''' is a [[marsupial]] from the family [[Macropodidae]] (macropods, meaning "large foot"). In common use the term is used to describe the largest species from this family, the [[red kangaroo]], as well as the [[antilopine kangaroo]], [[eastern grey kangaroo]], and [[western grey kangaroo]].<ref name=MSW3>{{MSW3 Groves | pages= 64 & 66}}</ref> Kangaroos are indigenous to [[Australia (continent)|Australia]] and [[New Guinea]]. The Australian government estimates that 34.3&nbsp;million kangaroos lived within the commercial harvest areas of Australia in 2011, up from 25.1&nbsp;million one year earlier.<ref>{{cite web|title=Kangaroo population estimates|url=http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/wildlife-trade/natives/wild-harvest/kangaroo-wallaby-statistics/kangaroo-population|publisher=Government of Australia: Department of the Environment|accessdate=27 October 2014}}</ref>

As with the terms "[[wallaroo]]" and "[[wallaby]]", "kangaroo" refers to a [[Paraphyly|paraphyletic]] grouping of species.  All three refer to members of the same taxonomic family, Macropodidae, and are distinguished according to size. The largest species in the family are called "kangaroos" and the smallest are generally called "wallabies".  The term "wallaroos" refers to species of an intermediate size.<ref name="Australian Wildlife" /> There are also the [[tree-kangaroo]]s, another type of macropod, which inhabit the [[tropical rainforest]]s of [[New Guinea]], far northeastern [[Queensland]] and some of the islands in the region. A general idea of the relative size of these informal terms could be:

* [[Wallaby|wallabies]]: head and body length of 45–105 cm and tail length of 33–75 cm; the [[dwarf wallaby]] (the smallest of all known macropod species) is 46 cm long and weighs 1.6 kg;

* [[tree-kangaroo]]s: ranging from [[Lumholtz's tree-kangaroo]]: body and head length of 48–65 cm, tail of 60–74 cm, weight of 7.2 kg (16 lb) for males and 5.9 kg (13 lb) for females; to the [[grizzled tree-kangaroo]]: length of 75–90 cm (30 to 35 in) and weight of 8–15 kg (18–33 lb);

* [[wallaroo]]s: the [[black wallaroo]] (the smallest of the two species) with a tail length of 60–70 cm and weight of 19–22 kg (41.8–48.5 lb) for males and 13 kg (28.6 lb) for females;

* kangaroos: a large male can be 2 m (6 ft 7 in) tall and weigh 90 kg (200 lb).


Kangaroos have large, powerful [[hind leg]]s, large feet adapted for leaping, a long muscular tail for balance, and a small head. Like most marsupials, female kangaroos have a [[Pouch (marsupial)|pouch]] called a marsupium in which [[Joey (marsupial)|joey]]s complete [[postnatal]] development.


The large kangaroos have adapted much better than the smaller macropods to land clearing for pastoral agriculture and habitat changes brought to the Australian landscape by humans. Many of the smaller species are rare and endangered, while kangaroos are relatively plentiful.


The kangaroo is a [[National symbols of Australia|symbol of Australia]], appears on the [[Coat of arms of Australia|Australian coat of arms]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Commonwealth Coat of Arms |url=https://www.pmc.gov.au/government/commonwealth-coat-arms|work=Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet |date=22 June 2016|publisher=Australian Government |accessdate=29 April 2020}}</ref> and on some of its [[Australian coins|currency]],<ref>{{cite web|title=One Dollar |url=https://www.ramint.gov.au/one-dollar |work=Royal Australian Mint |date=8 January 2016 |publisher=Australian Government |accessdate=29 April 2020 }}</ref> and is used as a logo for some of Australia's most well-known organisations, such as [[Qantas]],<ref>{{cite web|title=The Kangaroo Symbol|url=http://www.qantas.com.au/info/about/history/details19|work=Qantas|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060414182719/http://www.qantas.com.au/info/about/history/details19|archivedate=14 April 2006}}</ref> and as the [[roundel]] of the [[Royal Australian Air Force]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.airforce.gov.au/About_us/About_the_RAAF/Air_Force_Ensign/?RAAF-8f1IO5DsOyuE6wai0uL8r0DjCUFX+enq|title=RAAF Ensign and Roundel|author=Air Force}}</ref> The kangaroo is important to both [[Culture of Australia|Australian culture]] and the national image, and consequently there are numerous [[Kangaroo emblems and popular culture|popular culture references]].


Wild kangaroos are shot for meat, [[Kangaroo leather|leather hide]]s, and to protect grazing land.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.kangaroo-industry.asn.au/morinfo/BACKGR1.HTM |title=Kangaroo Industry Background Kangaroo Industries Association of Australia. July 2008 |publisher=Kangaroo-industry.asn.au |date=31 July 1997 |accessdate=5 April 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090205023954/http://www.kangaroo-industry.asn.au/morinfo/BACKGR1.HTM |archivedate=5 February 2009  }}</ref> Although controversial, [[kangaroo meat]] has perceived health benefits for human consumption compared with traditional meats due to the low level of fat on kangaroos.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Dow|first=Steve|title=An industry that's under the gun|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/environment/an-industry-thats-under-the-gun/2007/09/25/1190486311919.html?page=fullpage|accessdate=2 October 2011|newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald|date=26 September 2007}}</ref>


== Terminology ==

[[File:RedRoo.JPG|thumb|right|A male [[red kangaroo]]]]

The word ''kangaroo'' derives from the [[Guugu Yimithirr language|Guugu Yimithirr]] word ''gangurru'', referring to [[eastern grey kangaroo]]s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Etymology of mammal names in English|publisher=IberiaNature|url=http://iberianature.com/britainnature/miscellaneous/etymology-of-mammal-names-in-english/|accessdate=18 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Stephens|first=S.E.|author2=Cilento, Raphael|title=Introduction to Cooktown and its Museum|publisher=[[National Trust of Queensland]]|year=1976|asin=B0000CPFEZ}}</ref> The name was first recorded as "kanguru" on 12 July 1770 in an entry in the diary of Sir [[Joseph Banks]]; this occurred at the site of modern [[Cooktown, Queensland|Cooktown]], on the banks of the [[Endeavour River]], where {{HMS|Endeavour}} under the command of Lieutenant [[James Cook]] was beached for almost seven weeks to repair damage sustained on the [[Great Barrier Reef]].<ref>[http://andc.anu.edu.au/sites/default/files/vocab_aussie_eng.pdf Bruce Moore, ''The Vocabulary of Australian English'', Australian National Dictionary Centre, Australian National University]</ref> Cook first referred to kangaroos in his diary entry of 4 August. Guugu Yimithirr is the language of the [[Guugu Yimithirr people|people]] of the area.


A common myth about the kangaroo's English name is that it was a Guugu Yimithirr phrase for "I don't know" or "I don't understand".<ref>{{cite web|title=Believe it or nuts. (Columns/Posted 11/09/99)|publisher=[[Word Detective]]|url=http://www.word-detective.com/110999.html#kangaroo|accessdate=18 June 2011}}</ref> According to this legend, Cook and Banks were exploring the area when they happened upon the animal. They asked a nearby local what the creatures were called. The local responded "kangaroo", said to mean "I don't know/understand", which Cook then took to be the name of the creature.<ref name=jennings/> Anthropologist [[Walter Roth]] was trying to correct this legend as far back as in 1898, but few took note until 1972 when linguist John B. Haviland in his research with the Guugu Yimithirr people was able to fully confirm the proper etymology.<ref name=jennings>{{cite web |last1=Jennings |first1=Ken |title=The Debunker: Where Does the Word "Kangaroo" Come From? |url=https://www.woot.com/blog/post/the-debunker-where-does-the-word-kangaroo-come-from |website=woot.com |publisher=Woot |date=7 August 2019 |accessdate=16 December 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Haviland |first=John B. |year=1974 |title=A last look at Cook's Guugu-Yimidhirr wordlist |journal=Oceania |volume=44 |issue=3 |pages=216–232 |url=http://www.anthro.ucsd.edu/~jhaviland/Publications/HavilandOceania.pdf |accessdate=13 April 2008 |doi=10.1002/j.1834-4461.1974.tb01803.x }}</ref> There are similar, more credible stories of naming confusion, such as with the [[Yucatán Peninsula#Etymology|Yucatán Peninsula]].<ref name=jennings/>


Kangaroos are often colloquially referred to as "roos".<ref>{{cite web|title=Roo |work=[[Compact Editions of the Oxford English Dictionary|Compact Oxford English Dictionary]] |publisher=Ask Oxford.com |url=http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/roo?view=uk |accessdate=31 December 2006 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070211134324/http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/roo?view=uk |archivedate=11 February 2007 }}</ref> Male kangaroos are called bucks, boomers, jacks, or old men; females are does, flyers, or jills; and the young ones are [[Joey (marsupial)|joey]]s.<ref name="sandiego">{{cite web|title=Kangaroo and Wallaby|url=http://www.sandiegozoo.org/animalbytes/t-kangaroo.html|work=San Diego Zoo|publisher=Zoological Society of San Diego|accessdate=2 October 2011|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927154255/http://www.sandiegozoo.org/animalbytes/t-kangaroo.html|archivedate=27 September 2011}}</ref> The [[collective noun]] for a group of kangaroos is a mob, court, or troupe.<ref name="Kidcyber">{{cite web|last1=Sydenham |first1=S |last2=Thomas |first2=R |title=Kangaroos |url=http://www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/kanga.htm |work=Kidcyber |accessdate=2 October 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110903001135/http://www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/kanga.htm |archivedate=3 September 2011 }}</ref>


== Taxonomy and description ==

[[File:Kangur.rudy.drs.jpg|thumb|A male [[red kangaroo]] grazing]]

There are four extant species that are commonly referred to as kangaroos:

* The [[red kangaroo]] (''Osphranter rufus'')<ref name="afd2020">{{cite web|title=Names List for MACROPODIDAE, Australian Faunal Directory|url=https://biodiversity.org.au/afd/taxa/MACROPODIDAE/names|publisher=Australian Biological Resources Study, Australian Department of the Environment and Energy|accessdate=1 March 2020|date=13 February 2020}}</ref> is the largest surviving [[marsupial]] anywhere in the world. It occupies the arid and semi-arid centre of the country. The highest population densities of the red kangaroo occur in the rangelands of western New South Wales. Red kangaroos are commonly mistaken as the most abundant species of kangaroo, but eastern greys actually have a larger population.<ref name=dawson2012>{{cite book|last=Dawson|first=Terence|title=Kangaroos|edition=2nd|year=2012|publisher=CSIRO Publishing|location=Collingwood, VIC}}</ref> A large male can be 2 metres (6&nbsp;ft 7 in) tall and weighs 90&nbsp;kg (200&nbsp;lb).<ref name="reds">{{cite web|title=Red Kangaroo|url=http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/red-kangaroo/|work=NAT GEO Wild|publisher=National Geographic Society|accessdate=2 October 2011|date=11 November 2010}}</ref>

* The [[eastern grey kangaroo]] (''Macropus giganteus'')<ref name="afd2020" /> is less well-known than the red (outside Australia), but the most often seen, as its range covers the fertile eastern part of the country. The range of the eastern grey kangaroo extends from the top of the [[Cape York Peninsula]] in northern Queensland down to Victoria, as well as areas of southeastern Australia and Tasmania. Population densities of eastern grey kangaroos usually peak near 100 per km<sup>2</sup> in suitable habitats of open woodlands. Populations are more limited in areas of land clearance, such as farmland, where forest and woodland habitats are limited in size or abundance.<ref name=dawson2012 />

* The [[western grey kangaroo]] (''Macropus fuliginosus'')<ref name="afd2020" /> is slightly smaller again at about 54&nbsp;kg (119&nbsp;lb) for a large male. It is found in the southern part of Western Australia, South Australia near the coast, and the [[Murray–Darling basin]]. The highest population densities occur in the western Riverina district of New South Wales and in the western areas of the Nullarbor Plain in Western Australia. Populations may have declined, particularly in agricultural areas. The species has a high tolerance to the plant toxin [[sodium fluoroacetate]], which indicates a possible origin from the southwest region of Australia.<ref name=dawson2012 />

* The [[antilopine kangaroo]] (''Osphranter antilopinus'')<ref name="afd2020" /> is, essentially, the far northern equivalent of the eastern grey and western grey kangaroos. It is sometimes referred to as the antilopine wallaroo, but in behaviour and habitat it is more similar to the red, eastern grey and western grey kangaroos. Like them, it is a creature of the grassy plains and woodlands, and gregarious. Its name comes from its fur, which is similar in colour and texture to that of antelopes. Characteristically, the noses of males swell behind the nostrils. This enlarges nasal passages and allows them to release more heat in hot and humid climates.<ref name=dawson2012 />

[[File:Sthenurus.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Palate|palatal]] view of a ''[[Sthenurus]]'' sp. skull]]

In addition, there are about 50 smaller macropods closely related to the kangaroos in the family [[Macropodidae]]. Kangaroos and other macropods share a common ancestor with the [[Phalangeridae]] from the Middle [[Miocene]].<ref>{{cite journal |author=Rice, W.D.L. |title=Historical introduction to studies on the evolution and phylogeny of the Macropodidae |journal=Australian Mammalogy |volume=2 |pages=1–14 |year=1978 }}</ref> This ancestor was likely arboreal and lived in the canopies of the extensive forests that covered most of Australia at that time, when the climate was much wetter, and fed on leaves and stems.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> From the Late Miocene through the Pliocene and into the [[Pleistocene]] the climate got drier, which led to a decline of forests and expansion of grasslands. At this time, there was a radiation of macropodids characterised by enlarged body size and adaptation to the low quality grass diet with the development of [[foregut fermentation]].<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> The most numerous early macropods, the [[Balbaridae]] and the [[Bulungmayinae]], became extinct in the Late Miocene around 5–10 mya.<ref name=Tyndale2005>{{cite book |author=Tyndale-Biscoe, H |title=Life of Marsupials |publisher=CSIRO Publishing |year=2005 |page=302 |isbn=978-0-643-06257-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KqtlPZJ9y8EC&pg=PA302}}</ref> There is dispute over the relationships of the two groups to modern kangaroos and [[Potoroidae|rat-kangaroo]]s. Some argue that the balbarines were the ancestors of rat-kangaroos and the bulungmayines were the ancestors of kangaroos.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Cooke B, Kear B |title=Evolution and diversity of kangaroos (Macropodoidea, Marsupialia) |journal=Australian Mammalogy |volume=21 |pages=27–29 |year=1999 }}</ref> while others hold the contrary view.<ref>{{cite book |author=Flannery, T.F. |chapter=Phylogeny of the Macropodoidea; a study in convergence |editor1=Grigg G. |editor2=Jarman P. |editor3=Hume I.D. |title=Kangaroos, Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos |publisher=Surrey Beatty |location=Sydney |year=1989 |isbn=978-0-949324-22-1 |pages=1–46 }}</ref> [[File:The Kongouro from New Holland (Kangaroo) NMM ZBA5754 (cropped).jpg|upright|thumb|''[[The Kongouro from New Holland]]'', a 1772 painting of a kangaroo by [[George Stubbs]]]]


The middle to late bulungmayines, ''[[Ganguroo]]'' and ''Wanburoo'' lacked digit 1 of the hind foot and digits 2 and 3 were reduced and partly under the large digit 4, much like the modern kangaroo foot. This would indicate that they were bipedal. In addition, their ankle bones had an articulation that would have prohibited much lateral movements, an adaptation for bipedal hopping.<ref name=Tyndale2005/> Species related to the modern grey kangaroos and [[wallaroo]]s begin to appear in the Pliocene. The red kangaroo appears to be the most recently evolved kangaroo, with its fossil record not going back beyond the Pleistocene era, 1–2 mya.<ref name = "Dawson 1995"/>


The first kangaroo to be exhibited in the Western world was an example shot by [[John Gore (seaman)|John Gore]], an officer on Captain Cook's ship, the [[HMS Endeavour|HMS ''Endeavour'']], in 1770.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=Captain John Gore |url=http://www.nma.gov.au/shared/libraries/attachments/friends/archive/in_the_national_museum_captain_john_gore/files/17814/Captain_John_Gore_rf.pdf |journal=FRiENDS |volume=17 |issue=2 |issn=1323-5826 |date=June 2006 |accessdate=2 October 2011 |page=18 |first=Johanna |last=Parker |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120121210124/http://www.nma.gov.au/shared/libraries/attachments/friends/archive/in_the_national_museum_captain_john_gore/files/17814/Captain_John_Gore_rf.pdf |archive-date=21 January 2012 |url-status=dead  }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Cowley|first1=Des|last2=Hubber|first2=Brian|title=Kangaroo|journal=The La Trobe Journal|year=2000|issue=66|pages=4–[https://web.archive.org/web/20190628083125/http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-66/t1-g-t2.html 5]|url=http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-66/t1-g-t2.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190628083125/http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-66/t1-g-t2.html|archive-date=28 June 2019|accessdate=2 October 2011|editor1-first=John|editor1-last=Barnes|editor2-first=Sandra|editor2-last=Burt|issn=1441-3760}}</ref> The animal was shot and its skin and skull transported back to England whereupon it was stuffed (by [[Taxidermy|taxidermists]] who had never seen the animal before) and displayed to the general public as a curiosity.  The first glimpse of a kangaroo for many 18th-century Britons was a painting by [[George Stubbs]].<ref>The "i" newspaper, 21 June 2013. page 2</ref>


=== Comparison with wallabies ===

Kangaroos and [[Wallaby|wallabies]] belong to the same taxonomic family ([[Macropodidae]]) and often the same genera, but kangaroos are specifically categorised into the four largest species of the family. The term wallaby is an informal designation generally used for any [[Macropodidae|macropod]] that is smaller than a kangaroo or a [[wallaroo]] that has not been designated otherwise.<ref name="Australian Wildlife">{{cite web|title=The Kangaroo |url=http://www.australianwildlife.com.au/kangaroo.htm |accessdate=6 November 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140125064953/http://australianwildlife.com.au/kangaroo.htm |archivedate=25 January 2014 }}</ref>


== Biology and behaviour ==

{{see also|Red kangaroo#Behaviour|Eastern grey kangaroo#Behaviour}}


=== Locomotion ===

[[File:Kangaroo-in-flight.jpg|right|thumb|A [[Eastern grey kangaroo#Taxonomy|Tasmanian eastern grey kangaroo]] in motion]]

Kangaroos are the only large animals to use hopping as a means of [[Animal locomotion|locomotion]]. The comfortable hopping speed for a red kangaroo is about {{convert|20–25|kph|abbr=on}}, but speeds of up to {{convert|70|kph|abbr=on}} can be attained over short distances, while it can sustain a speed of {{convert|40|kph|abbr=on}} for nearly {{convert|2|km|abbr=on}}.<ref name="secret">{{cite book | last = Penny | first = Malcolm | title = The Secret World of Kangaroos | publisher=Raintree Steck-Vaughn  | year = 2002 | location = Austin TX | isbn = 978-0-7398-4986-6 | url= https://books.google.com/books?id=NNLpLfdP5GwC&q=%2270+km%22}}</ref> During a hop, the powerful [[gastrocnemius muscle]]s lift the body off the ground while the smaller [[plantaris muscle]], which attaches near the large fourth toe, is used for push-off. Seventy percent of potential energy is stored in the elastic tendons.<ref>{{cite book|author=Jackson, S.; Vernes, K.|year=2010|title=Kangaroo: Portrait of an Extraordinary Marsupial|publisher=Allen and Unwin|pages=139–140|isbn=9781741759037}}</ref> At slow speeds, it employs pentapedal locomotion, using its tail to form a tripod with its two [[forelimb]]s while bringing its hind feet forward. Both pentapedal walking and fast hopping are energetically costly. Hopping at moderate speeds is the most energy efficient, and a kangaroo moving above {{convert|15|kph|abbr=on}} maintains energy consistency more than similarly-sized animal running at the same speed.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> Kangaroos are adept [[aquatic locomotion|swimmers]], and often flee into waterways if threatened by a predator. If pursued into the water, a kangaroo may use its forepaws to hold the predator underwater so as to [[drowning|drown]] it.<ref name="camuseum">{{cite web|title=Kangaroos|url=http://www.nature.ca/notebooks/english/kanga.htm|work=Natural History Notebooks|publisher=Canadian Museum of Nature|accessdate=2 October 2011|date=3 May 2011}}</ref>


=== Diet ===

[[File:Kangaroos Maranoa.JPG|thumb|Kangaroos in their native grassland habitat]]

Kangaroos have single-chambered stomachs quite unlike those of cattle and sheep, which have four compartments.<ref name=Hume1984>{{cite journal | last = Hume | first = I.D. |year = 1984 | title = Principal Features of Digestion in Kangaroos | journal = Proceedings of the Nutritional Society of Australia | volume = 9 | url=http://apjcn.nhri.org.tw/server/apjcn/ProcNutSoc/1980-1989/1984/1984%20p76-81.pdf | pages = 76–81 }}</ref><ref name=VB>{{cite book |author=Romer, Alfred Sherwood|author2=Parsons, Thomas S.|year=1977 |title=The Vertebrate Body |publisher=Holt-Saunders International |location= Philadelphia, PA|page= 347|isbn= 978-0-03-910284-5}}</ref> They sometimes regurgitate the vegetation they have eaten, chew it as [[cud]], and then swallow it again for final digestion. However, this is a different, more strenuous, activity than it is in [[ruminant]]s, and does not take place as frequently.<ref name=Vendl2017>{{cite journal | author = Vendl, C. | display-authors = etal | year = 2017 | title = Merycism in western grey (''Macropus fuliginosus'') and red kangaroos (''Macropus rufus'') | journal = Mammalian Biology | volume = 86 | pages = 21–26 | doi = 10.1016/j.mambio.2017.03.005| doi-access = free }}</ref>


Different species of kangaroos have different diets, although all are strict [[herbivores]]. The eastern grey kangaroo is predominantly a [[Grazing|grazer]], and eats a wide variety of grasses, whereas some other species such as the red kangaroo include significant amounts of [[shrub]]s in their diets. Smaller species of kangaroos also consume [[hypogeal]] fungi. Many species are [[nocturnal]],<ref name="archive">{{cite web|last=McGuinness|first=Keith|title=Re: Kangaroos|url=http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/dec96/845059250.Zo.r.html|work=MadSci Network|accessdate=2 October 2011|date=25 November 1996}}</ref> and [[crepuscular]],<ref name="colzoo">{{cite web|title=From Boomers to Blue fliers: Fun facts About Kangaroos!!|url=http://www.colszoo.org/animalareas/austral/kangfact.html|work=Columbus Zoo and Aquarium|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20040226032907/http://www.colszoo.org/animalareas/austral/kangfact.html|archivedate=26 February 2004}}</ref><ref name="nocturn2">{{cite web|url=http://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/kangaroos.html |title=About Australia: Kangaroos |publisher=Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade |accessdate=6 June 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120527162537/http://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/kangaroos.html |archivedate=27 May 2012 }}</ref> usually spending the hot days resting in shade, and the cool evenings, nights and mornings moving about and feeding.


Because of its grazing habits, the kangaroo has developed specialized teeth that are rare among mammals. Its [[incisor]]s are able to crop grass close to the ground and its [[molar (tooth)|molar]]s chop and grind the grass. Since the two sides of the lower jaw are not joined or fused together, the lower incisors are farther apart, giving the kangaroo a wider bite. The [[silica]] in grass is abrasive, so kangaroo molars are ground down and they actually move forward in the mouth before they eventually fall out, and are replaced by new teeth that grow in the back.<ref>[http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_192.htm Kangaroo: the teeth] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140417103429/http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_192.htm |date=17 April 2014 }}</ref> This process is known as [[polyphyodont]]y and, amongst other mammals, only occurs in elephants and [[manatees]].


==== Absence of digestive methane release ====

Despite having herbivorous diets similar to [[ruminant]]s such as cattle, which release large quantities of digestive [[methane]] through [[Breathing|exhaling]] and [[eructation]] (burping), kangaroos release virtually none. The [[hydrogen]] byproduct of [[fermentation]] is instead converted into [[acetate]], which is then used to provide further energy. Scientists are interested in the possibility of transferring the bacteria responsible for this process from kangaroos to cattle, since the [[greenhouse gas]] effect of methane is 23 times greater than [[carbon dioxide]] per molecule.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Vendl |first1=C. |last2=Clauss |first2=M. |last3=Stewart |first3=M. |last4=Leggett |first4=K. |last5=Hummel |first5=J. |last6=Kreuzer |first6=M. |last7=Munn |first7=A. |title=Decreasing methane yield with increasing food intake keeps daily methane emissions constant in two foregut fermenting marsupials, the western grey kangaroo and red kangaroo |journal=Journal of Experimental Biology |date=4 November 2015 |volume=218 |issue=21 |pages=3425–3434 |doi=10.1242/jeb.128165 |pmid=26538176 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


=== Social and sexual behavior ===

[[File:Group of Macropus fuliginosus Darling Range 05010.JPG|thumb|right|[[Western grey kangaroo]]s]]

Groups of kangaroos are called ''mobs'', ''courts'' or ''troupes'', which usually have 10 or more kangaroos in them. Living in mobs can provide protection for some of the weaker members of the group.<ref name="Kidcyber"/> The size and stability of mobs vary between geographic regions,<ref name = "McCullough 2000">{{harvnb|McCullough|2000}}</ref> with eastern Australia having larger and more stable aggregations than in arid areas farther west.<ref name="McCullough 2000"/> Larger aggregations display high amounts of interactions and complex social structures, comparable to that of [[ungulate]]s.<ref name="McCullough 2000"/> One common behavior is nose touching and sniffing, which mostly occurs when an individual joins a group.<ref name="Dawson 1995">{{cite book |author=Dawson, Terence J. |title=Kangaroos: Biology of the Largest Marsupials |publisher=Cornell University Press/Comstock Publishing |year=1995 |isbn=978-0-8014-8262-5 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/kangaroosbiology00daws }}</ref> The kangaroo performing the sniffing gains much information from smell cues. This behavior enforces social cohesion without consequent aggression. During mutual sniffing, if one kangaroo is smaller, it will hold its body closer to the ground and its head will quiver, which serves as a possible form of submission.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> Greetings between males and females are common, with larger males being the most involved in meeting females. Most other non-antagonistic behavior occurs between mothers and their young. Mother and young reinforce their bond though grooming. A mother will groom her young while it is suckling or after it is finished suckling.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/>  A joey will nuzzle its mother's pouch if it wants access to it.


{{Anchor|Sexual behavior}}

[[Animal sexual behavior|Sexual activity]] of kangaroos consists of consort pairs.<ref name = "Gansloßer 1995"/> [[Estrus|Oestrous]] females roam widely and attract the attention of males with conspicuous signals.<ref name = "Gansloßer 1995">{{cite journal |author=Gansloßer, Udo |title=Courtship behaviour in Macropodoidea (kangaroos, wallabies and rat kangaroos)&nbsp;– phylogenetic and ecological influences on ritualization |journal=Mammal Review |volume=25 |issue=3 |pages=131–157 |year=1995 |doi=10.1111/j.1365-2907.1995.tb00453.x }}</ref> A male will monitor a female and follow her every movement. He sniffs her urine to see if she is in oestrus, a process exhibiting the [[flehmen response]]. The male will then proceed to approach her slowly to avoid alarming her.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> If the female does not run away, the male will continue by licking, pawing, and scratching her, and copulation will follow.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> After copulation is over, the male will move on to another female. Consort pairing may take several days and the copulation is also long. Thus, a consort pair is likely to attract the attention of a rival male.<ref name = "Gansloßer 1995"/> As larger males are tending bonds with females near oestrus, smaller males will tend to females that are farther from oestrus.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/> [[dominance (ethology)|Dominant]] males can avoid having to sort through females to determine their reproductive status by searching for tending bonds held by the largest male they can displace without a fight.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/>

[[File:- fighting red kangaroos 1.jpg|thumb|Two male [[red kangaroo]]s boxing]]

Fighting has been described in all species of kangaroos. Fights between kangaroos can be brief or long and ritualised.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> In highly competitive situations, such as males fighting for access to oestrous females or at limited drinking spots, the fights are brief.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> Both sexes will fight for drinking spots, but long, ritualised fighting or "boxing" is largely done by males. Smaller males fight more often near females in oestrus, while the large males in consorts do not seem to get involved. Ritualised fights can arise suddenly when males are grazing together. However, most fights are preceded by two males scratching and grooming each other.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> One or both of them will adopt a high standing posture, with one male issuing a challenge by grasping the other male's neck with its forepaw. Sometimes, the challenge will be declined. Large males often reject challenges by smaller males. During fighting, the combatants adopt a high standing posture and paw at each other's heads, shoulders and chests. They will also lock forearms and wrestle and push each other as well as balance on their tails to kick each other in the abdomen.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/>


Brief fights are similar, except there is no forearm locking. The losing combatant seems to use kicking more often, perhaps to parry the thrusts of the eventual winner. A winner is decided when a kangaroo breaks off the fight and retreats. Winners are able to push their opponents backwards or down to the ground. They also seem to grasp their opponents when they break contact and push them away.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> The initiators of the fights are usually the winners. These fights may serve to establish dominance hierarchies among males, as winners of fights have been seen to displace their opponent from resting sites later in the day.<ref name="Dawson 1995"/> Dominant males may also pull grass to intimidate subordinate ones.<ref name = "McCullough 2000"/>


=== Predators ===

Kangaroos have a few natural [[predator]]s. The [[thylacine]], considered by palaeontologists to have once been a major natural predator of the kangaroo, is now [[Extinction|extinct]]. Other extinct predators included the [[marsupial lion]], ''[[Megalania]]'' and ''[[Wonambi]]''. However, with the arrival of humans in Australia at least 50,000 years ago and the introduction of the [[dingo]] about 5,000 years ago, kangaroos have had to adapt. <!--The use of dingoes, and later hunting dogs by Europeans, to hunt kangaroos has resulted in most kangaroos having an enmity for dogs; citation needed--> [[Wedge-tailed eagle]]s and other raptors usually eat kangaroo [[carrion]]. [[Goanna]]s and other carnivorous reptiles also pose a danger to smaller kangaroo species when other food sources are lacking. <!--crocodiles?? unlikely...-->


Along with dingoes, [[Invasive species, Australia|introduced species]] such as foxes, [[feral cat]]s, and both domestic and feral dogs, pose a threat to kangaroo populations. Kangaroos and wallabies are adept [[Aquatic locomotion|swimmers]], and often flee into waterways if presented with the option. If pursued into the water, a large kangaroo may use its forepaws to hold the predator underwater so as to [[Drowning|drown]] it.<ref name="camuseum"/> Another defensive [[Tactic (method)|tactic]] described by witnesses is catching the attacking dog with the forepaws and [[disembowel]]ling it with the hind legs.


=== Adaptations ===

[[File:Baby kangaroo.JPG|thumb|A baby kangaroo (joey)]]

Kangaroos have developed a number of adaptations to a dry, infertile country and highly variable climate. As with all [[marsupial]]s, the young are born at a very early stage of development—after a [[gestation]] of 31–36 days. At this stage, only the forelimbs are somewhat developed, to allow the newborn to climb to the [[Pouch (marsupial)|pouch]] and attach to a [[teat]]. In comparison, a human [[embryo]] at a similar stage of development would be about seven weeks old, and [[Premature birth|premature babies]] born at less than 23 weeks are usually not mature enough to survive. When the joey is born, it is about the size of a [[Phaseolus lunatus|lima bean]]. The joey will usually stay in the pouch for about nine months (180–320 days for the Western Grey) before starting to leave the pouch for small periods of time. It is usually fed by its mother until reaching 18 months.


The female kangaroo is usually pregnant in permanence, except on the day she gives birth; however, she has the ability to freeze the development of an embryo until the previous [[Joey (marsupial)|joey]] is able to leave the pouch. This is known as [[embryonic diapause]], and will occur in times of drought and in areas with poor food sources. The composition of the milk produced by the mother varies according to the needs of the joey. In addition, the mother is able to produce two different kinds of milk simultaneously for the newborn and the older joey still in the pouch.


Unusually, during a dry period, males will not produce sperm, and females will conceive only if enough rain has fallen to produce a large quantity of green vegetation.<ref name="animal">{{cite book | last = Burnie | first = David |author2=Don E. Wilson | title = Animal | publisher=DK | year = 2001 | location = New York NY | pages = 99–101 | isbn = 978-0-7894-7764-4}}</ref>


[[File:Kaenguru Hinterfuss-drawing.jpg|thumb|left|The hind leg of a kangaroo]] Kangaroos and wallabies have large, elastic tendons in their hind legs. They store elastic strain energy in the [[tendon]]s of their large hind legs, providing most of the energy required for each hop by the spring action of the tendons rather than by any muscular effort.<ref name="tendons & hopping">{{cite book| last=Dawson| first=Terence J. (Professor UNSW)| title=Kangaroos: Biology of the largest marsupials| year=1998| publisher=Comstock Pub. Associates| location=Ithaca, N.Y.| isbn=9780801482625| pages=7–11| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KNxIlprcmTYC&q=ancestors+of+kangaroos&pg=PA6| edition=2nd| accessdate=3 August 2013| format=Paperback}}</ref> This is true in all animal species which have muscles connected to their skeletons through elastic elements such as tendons, but the effect is more pronounced in kangaroos.


There is also a link between the hopping action and breathing: as the feet leave the ground, air is expelled from the lungs; bringing the feet forward ready for landing refills the lungs, providing further energy efficiency. Studies of kangaroos and [[Wallaby|wallabies]] have demonstrated, beyond the minimum energy expenditure required to hop at all, increased speed requires very little extra effort (much less than the same speed increase in, say, a horse, dog or human), and the extra energy is required to carry extra weight. For kangaroos, the key benefit of hopping is not speed to escape predators—the top speed of a kangaroo is no higher than that of a similarly sized quadruped, and the Australian native predators are in any case less fearsome than those of other countries—but economy: in an infertile country with highly variable weather patterns, the ability of a kangaroo to travel long distances at moderately high speed in search of food sources is crucial to survival.


New research has revealed that a kangaroo's tail acts as a third leg rather than just a balancing strut. Kangaroos have a unique three-stage walk where they plant their front legs and tail first, then push off their tail, followed lastly by the back legs. The propulsive force of the tail is equal to that of both the front and hind legs combined and performs as much work as what a human leg walking can at the same speed.<ref>{{cite news|title=Kangaroos use tail like a leg to walk|url=http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2014/07/kangaroos-use-tail-to-walk|accessdate=18 November 2014|website=Australian Geographic|date=2 July 2014}}</ref>


A [[DNA sequencing]] project of the [[genome]] of a member of the kangaroo family, the [[tammar wallaby]], was started in 2004. It was a collaboration between Australia (mainly funded by the [[Victoria (Australia)|State of Victoria]]) and the [[National Institutes of Health]] in the US.<ref name="genome">{{Cite press release|author=Spencer, Geoff |title=Kangaroo Hops in Line for Genome Sequencing |url=http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jun2004/nhgri-08.htm |work=National Human Genome Research Institute |publisher=National Institutes of Health |accessdate=2 October 2011 |date=8 June 2004 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002020057/http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jun2004/nhgri-08.htm |archivedate=2 October 2011 }}</ref> The tammar's genome was fully sequenced in 2011.<ref name="Renfree/Papenfuss">{{cite journal |author=Renfree M. B. |author2=Papenfuss, A. T. |author3=Deakin, J. E. |display-authors=etal | title=Genome sequence of an Australian kangaroo, ''Macropus eugenii'', provides insight into the evolution of mammalian reproduction and development.| journal=Genome Biology| volume=12| issue=8| pages=R81| pmid=21854559| doi=10.1186/gb-2011-12-8-r81| pmc=3277949 | date=19 August 2011}}</ref> The genome of a marsupial such as the kangaroo is of great interest to scientists studying [[comparative genomics]], because marsupials are at an ideal degree of evolutionary divergence from humans: [[mouse|mice]] are too close and have not developed many different functions, while birds are genetically too remote. The dairy industry could also benefit from this project.<ref>{{cite journal|title=The tammar wallaby: A model to examine endocrine and local control of lactation|journal=IUBMB Life|last1=Brennan|first1=A. J.|last2=Sharp|first2=J. A.|last3=Digby|first3=M. R.|last4=Nicholas|first4=K. R.|volume=59|issue=3|pages=146–150|year=2007|doi=10.1080/15216540701335724|doi-access=free|pmid=17487685}}</ref>


=== Blindness ===

Eye disease is rare but not new among kangaroos. The first official report of kangaroo blindness took place in 1994, in central [[New South Wales]]. The following year, reports of blind kangaroos appeared in Victoria and South Australia. By 1996, the disease had spread "across the desert to Western Australia".<ref name=nwf/> Australian authorities were concerned the disease could spread to other livestock and possibly humans. Researchers at the Australian Animal Health Laboratories in [[Geelong]] detected a virus called the Wallal virus in two species of [[midge]]s, believed to have been the carriers.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Hooper |first=P |title=Kangaroo blindness and some other new viral diseases in Australia |journal=Australian Veterinary Journal |volume=77 |issue=8 |pages=514–5 |date=August 1999 |url=http://www.ava.com.au/avj/9908/99080514.pdf |accessdate=31 December 2006 |doi=10.1111/j.1751-0813.1999.tb12122.x |pmid=10494397 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060917145454/http://www.ava.com.au/avj/9908/99080514.pdf |archivedate=17 September 2006 |url-status=dead  }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1071/EC87p36 | title = Viruses on the hop | journal=Ecos | issue = 87 |date=Autumn 1996 | author1 = <!-- Please add first missing authors to populate metadata. --> | volume=1996 | page=36}}</ref> [[Veterinarians]] also discovered fewer than 3% of kangaroos exposed to the virus developed blindness.<ref name=nwf>{{cite web | last = Harrison | first = George | title = Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Kangaroos | date = September–October 1997 | publisher=National Wildlife Federation | archiveurl  = https://web.archive.org/web/20051230075601/http://www.nwf.org/internationalwildlife/kangaroo.html | archivedate = 30 December 2005 | url = http://www.nwf.org/internationalwildlife/kangaroo.html}}</ref>


=== Reproduction and life cycle ===

{{see also|Red kangaroo#Reproduction|Eastern grey kangaroo#Reproduction}}

[[File:Joey in pouch.jpg|thumb|A newborn joey sucking on a teat in the pouch]]

Kangaroo reproduction is similar to that of [[opossum]]s. The egg (still contained in the shell membrane, a few micrometres thick, and with only a small quantity of yolk within it) descends from the [[ovary]] into the [[uterus]]. There it is fertilised and quickly develops into a [[neonate]]. Even in the largest kangaroo species (the [[red kangaroo]]), the neonate emerges after only 33 days. Usually, only one young is born at a time. It is blind, hairless, and only a few centimetres long; its hindlegs are mere stumps; it instead uses its more developed forelegs to climb its way through the thick fur on its mother's [[abdomen]] into the pouch, which takes about three to five minutes. Once in the pouch, it fastens onto one of the four teats and starts to feed. Almost immediately, the mother's sexual cycle starts again. Another egg descends into the uterus and she becomes sexually receptive. Then, if she mates and a second egg is fertilised, its development is temporarily halted. This is known as [[embryonic diapause]], and will occur in times of drought and in areas with poor food sources. Meanwhile, the neonate in the pouch grows rapidly. After about 190 days, the baby ([[Marsupial#Early development|joey]]) is sufficiently large and developed to make its full emergence out of the pouch, after sticking its head out for a few weeks until it eventually feels safe enough to fully emerge. From then on, it spends increasing time in the outside world and eventually, after about 235 days, it leaves the pouch for the last time.<ref>[http://planet.uwc.ac.za/nisl/biodiversity/loe/page_193.htm Evolution of Biodiversity], BCB705 Biodiversity, University of the Western Cape</ref> The [[Life expectancy|lifespan]] of kangaroos averages at six years in the wild<ref name="patricia">{{Cite book|last =Miller-Schroeder|first =Patricia |title =Kangaroos|series=The Untamed World|publisher=Raintree Steck-Vaughn|year =2002|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zO_YyJfjK00C&q=kangaroo++lifespan|isbn =978-0-7398-4972-9}}</ref>to in excess of 20 years in captivity, varying by the species.<ref name="park">{{cite web|url=http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au/education/factfiles/06.htm |title=Kangaroo |publisher=Parks Victoria |accessdate=20 February 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110208012253/http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au/education/factfiles/06.htm |archivedate=8 February 2011 }}</ref> Most individuals, however, do not reach maturity in the wild.<ref name="nowak">{{Cite book|last =Nowak|first =Ronald M. |title =Walker's mammals of the world|publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press|volume=2|year =1999|isbn =978-0-8018-5789-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T37sFCl43E8C&q=kangaroo+average+life+span+wild&pg=PA125

}}</ref><ref name="giganteus">{{cite web|url=http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Macropus_giganteus.html|title=Macropus giganteus|last2= Wund |last1= Joo |first2=Matthew|first1=Michael S.|publisher=Animal Diversity Web, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology|accessdate=20 February 2011}}</ref>


== Interaction with humans ==

[[File:Ridpath's Universal history - an account of the origin, primitive condition and ethnic development of the great races of mankind, and of the principal events in the evolution and progress of the (14583958439).jpg|thumb|[[Aboriginal Australians]] hunting kangaroos]]

[[Image:StateLibQld 1 100472.jpg|right|thumb|A kangaroo in a domestic setting, [[Queensland]], Australia, circa 1900–1910]]

The kangaroo has always been a very important animal for [[Aboriginal Australians]], for its [[Kangaroo meat|meat]], hide, bone, and [[tendon]]. Kangaroo hides were also sometimes used for recreation; in particular there are accounts of some tribes ([[Gunai people|Kurnai]]) using stuffed [[kangaroo scrotum]] as a ball for the traditional football game of [[marngrook]]. In addition, there were important [[Dreaming (spirituality)|Dreaming stories]] and ceremonies involving the kangaroo. Aherrenge is a current kangaroo dreaming site in the [[Northern Territory]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Aherrenge Road|url=http://www.ntlis.nt.gov.au/placenames/view.jsp?id=24029|work=Northern Territory Land Information System|publisher=Northern Territory Government|accessdate=2 October 2011}}</ref>


Unlike many of the smaller macropods, kangaroos have fared well since [[History of Australia|European settlement]]. European settlers cut down forests to create vast grasslands for [[Domestic sheep|sheep]] and cattle grazing, added stock watering points in arid areas, and have substantially reduced the number of dingoes.


Kangaroos are shy and retiring by nature, and in normal circumstances present no threat to humans.  In 2003, Lulu, an eastern grey which had been hand-reared, saved a farmer's life by alerting family members to his location when he was injured by a falling tree branch. She received the [[RSPCA Australia]] National Animal Valour Award on 19 May 2004.<ref>{{cite news | last = Leung | first = Chee Chee | title =Lulu the kangaroo hops to the rescue |work=The Age |location=Australia |date= 23 September 2003| url = http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/09/22/1064082926928.html?from=storyrhs| accessdate =10 January 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title =Life-saving kangaroo wins award |publisher=BBC News   |date= 29 April 2004| url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3667733.stm| accessdate =10 January 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Skippy to the rescue|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3127814.stm|accessdate=2 October 2011|publisher=BBC News|date=22 September 2003}}</ref>


There are very few records of kangaroos attacking humans without provocation; however, several such unprovoked attacks in 2004 spurred fears of a [[rabies]]-like disease possibly affecting the marsupials. The only reliably documented case of a fatality from a kangaroo attack occurred in New South Wales in 1936. A hunter was killed when he tried to rescue his two dogs from a heated fray. Other suggested causes for erratic and dangerous kangaroo behaviour include extreme thirst and hunger. In July 2011, a male red kangaroo attacked a 94-year-old woman in her own backyard as well as her son and two police officers responding to the situation. The kangaroo was capsicum sprayed (pepper sprayed) and later put down after the attack.<ref>{{cite news|title=Rogue kangaroo attacks 94-year-old Phyllis Johnson|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-14287357|accessdate=2 October 2011|publisher=BBC News|date=26 July 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Pepper-sprayed kangaroo put down|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-07-27/pepper-sprayed-roo-put-down/2813022|accessdate=2 October 2011|publisher=ABC News|date=27 July 2011}}</ref>


=== Conflict with vehicles ===

[[File:Kangaroo Sign at Stuart Highway.jpg|upright|left|thumb|A "kangaroo crossing" sign on an Australian highway]]


A collision with a vehicle is capable of killing a kangaroo. Kangaroos dazzled by headlights or startled by engine noise often leap in front of cars. Since kangaroos in mid-bound can reach speeds of around 50 km/h (31 mph) and are relatively heavy, the force of impact can be severe. Small vehicles may be destroyed, while larger vehicles may suffer engine damage. The risk of harm or death to vehicle occupants is greatly increased if the [[windscreen]] is the point of impact. As a result, "kangaroo crossing" signs are commonplace in Australia.


Vehicles that frequent isolated roads, where roadside assistance may be scarce, are often fitted with "[[Bull bar|roo bar]]s" to minimise damage caused by collision. [[Hood (vehicle)|Bonnet]]-mounted devices, designed to scare wildlife off the road with [[ultrasound]] and other methods, have been devised and marketed.


If a female is the victim of a collision, animal welfare groups ask that her pouch be checked for any surviving joey, in which case it may be removed to a wildlife sanctuary or veterinary surgeon for [[Wildlife rehabilitation|rehabilitation]]. Likewise, when an adult kangaroo is injured in a collision, a [[Veterinary surgeon|vet]], the [[RSPCA Australia]] or the [[National Parks and Wildlife Service (South Australia)|National Parks and Wildlife Service]] can be consulted for instructions on proper care. In New South Wales, rehabilitation of kangaroos is carried out by volunteers from [[NSW Wildlife Information and Rescue Service|WIRES]].  Council road signs often list phone numbers for callers to report injured animals.


== Emblems and popular culture ==

{{Main|Kangaroo emblems and popular culture}}

[[File:Australian Coat of Arms.png|thumb|A kangaroo and an emu feature on the [[Australian coat of arms]]]]

The kangaroo is a recognisable symbol of Australia. The kangaroo and [[emu]] feature on the [[Australian coat of arms]].  Kangaroos have also been featured on coins, most notably the five kangaroos on the [[Australian one dollar coin]].  The [[Australian Made logo]] consists of a golden kangaroo in a green triangle to show that a product is grown or made in Australia.


Registered [[Trademark|trademarks]] of early Australian companies using the kangaroo included Yung, Schollenberger & Co. Walla Walla Brand leather and skins (1890); Arnold V. Henn (1892) whose emblem showed a family of kangaroos playing with a [[skipping rope]]; Robert Lascelles & Co. linked the speed of the animal with its [[velocipede]]s (1896); while some overseas manufacturers, like that of "The Kangaroo" [[match|safety matches]] (made in Japan) of the early 1900s, also adopted the symbol. Even today, Australia's national airline, [[Qantas]], uses a bounding kangaroo for its logo.<ref name=":0">{{Citation | author1=Cozzolino, Mimmo | author2=Rutherford, G. Fysh (Graeme Fysh), 1947- | title=Symbols of Australia | date=2000 | page=62 | publisher=Mimmo Cozzolino | edition=20th anniversary | isbn=978-0-646-40309-0 | author1-link=Mimmo Cozzolino }}</ref>


The kangaroo and wallaby feature predominantly in Australian sports teams names and mascots. Examples include the [[Australian national rugby league team]] (the Kangaroos) and the [[Australian national rugby union team]] (the Wallabies). In a nation-wide competition held in 1978 for the [[1982 Commonwealth Games|XII Commonwealth Games]] by the Games Australia Foundation Limited in 1982, Hugh Edwards' design was chosen; a simplified form of six thick stripes arranged in pairs extending from along the edges of a triangular centre represent both the kangaroo in full flight, and a stylised "A" for Australia.<ref name=":0">{{Citation | author1=Cozzolino, Mimmo | author2=Rutherford, G. Fysh (Graeme Fysh), 1947- | title=Symbols of Australia | date=2000 | page=62 | publisher=Mimmo Cozzolino | edition=20th anniversary | isbn=978-0-646-40309-0 | author1-link=Mimmo Cozzolino }}</ref>


Kangaroos are well represented in films, television, books, toys and souvenirs around the world. ''[[Skippy the Bush Kangaroo]]'' was a popular 1960s Australian children's television series about a fictional pet kangaroo. Kangaroos are featured in the [[Rolf Harris]] song "[[Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport]]" and several Christmas carols.


== Meat ==

{{Main|Kangaroo meat}}

[[File:Kangaroo Meat.jpg|thumb|right|Kangaroo meat on sale in Melbourne]]

Historically, the kangaroo has been a source of food for [[indigenous Australians]]. Kangaroo meat is high in [[protein]] and low in fat (about 2%). Kangaroo meat has a high concentration of [[conjugated linoleic acid]] (CLA) compared with other foods, and is a rich source of vitamins and minerals.<ref name="Macro Meats Australia">{{cite web|title=Nutrition |url=http://www.macromeats.com.au/Nutrition/AmazingNutritionFacts.aspx |accessdate=6 November 2013 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131101083733/http://www.macromeats.com.au/Nutrition/AmazingNutritionFacts.aspx |archivedate=1 November 2013 }}</ref> Low fat diets rich in CLA have been studied for their potential in reducing obesity and atherosclerosis.<ref name = SMH20070926>{{Cite news|url = http://www.smh.com.au/news/environment/an-industry-thats-under-the-gun/2007/09/25/1190486311919.html?page=fullpage |title = An industry that's under the gun| date = 26 September 2007|last = Dow|first = Steve|work=The Sydney Morning Herald |accessdate =19 August 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Sinclair AJ, O'Dea K, Dunstan G, Ireland PD, Niall M |s2cid=4001525 |title=Effects on plasma lipids and fatty acid composition of very low fat diets enriched with fish or kangaroo meat |journal=Lipids |volume=22 |issue=7 |pages=523–9 |date=July 1987 |pmid=3626779 |doi=10.1007/BF02540369 }}</ref>


Most kangaroo meat is currently sourced from wild animals as a byproduct of population control programs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.daytondailynews.com/news/national/students-served-kangaroo-meat-chili-school-without-their-knowledge/xmjhutJRQeXeaHwwWaI9rO/|title=Students served kangaroo meat in chili at school without their knowledge|last=Shelby Lin Erdman|first=Cox Media Group National Content Desk|website=daytondailynews|access-date=20 February 2019}}</ref> Kangaroos are hunted by licensed shooters in accordance with a strict code of practice and are protected by state and federal legislation.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/11/wildlife-watch-kangaroo-hunting-controversy-australia/|title=Australians Hunt Kangaroos Commercially. Does It Make Sense?|date=21 November 2017|website=National Geographic News|access-date=20 February 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://blogs.reuters.com/photographers-blog/2013/04/03/a-necessary-evil-the-kangaroo-cull/|title=A necessary evil – the kangaroo cull|last=Gray|first=David|date=3 April 2013|website=Reuters Blogs|access-date=20 February 2019}}</ref>


Kangaroo meat is exported to many countries around the world.


== See also ==

  • {{annotated link|BionicKangaroo}} – biomimetic robot
  • {{annotated link|Boxing kangaroo}} (symbol)
  • {{annotated link|Embryonic diapause}}
  • {{annotated link|Kangaroo court}} (mock justice)
  • {{annotated link|Kangaroo industry}}


== References ==

{{Reflist|30em}}


== Further reading ==

{{refbegin|30em}}

  • {{cite book |last1=McCullough |first1=Dale R. |last2=McCullough |first2=Yvette |title=Kangaroos in Outback Australia |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-231-11916-0 |ref={{harvid|McCullough|2000}}}}
  • {{cite book |last1=Flannery | author1link = Tim Flannery|title=Tree Kangaroos: A Curious Natural History |publisher=Reed Books |location=Melbourne |year=1996 |isbn=978-0-7301-0492-6 |first1=Timothy Fridtjof |last2=Martin |first2=Roger }}
  • {{cite book |author=Underhill D. |title=Australia's Dangerous Creatures |publisher=[[Reader's Digest]] |location=Sydney NSW |year=1993 |isbn=978-0-86438-018-0 }}
  • {{cite book |first=Michael |last=Archer| author1link =Mike Archer (paleontologist) |title=The Kangaroo |publisher=[[Kevin Weldon Press]] |location=Sydney NSW |year=1985 |isbn=978-0-949708-22-9 }}

{{refend}}


== External links ==

{{Commons|Macropus}}

{{Wiktionary|kangaroo}}

* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lCKc8tURtc Video of Kangaroo giving Birth]


{{Diprotodontia|M.}}


{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Australian Aboriginal culture]]

[[Category:Macropods]]

[[Category:Marsupials of Australia]]

[[Category:National symbols of Australia]]

[[Category:Clawed herbivores]]

[[Category:Mammal common names]]

[[Category:Taxa named by John Edward Gray]]