By Stuart Blackman

Published: Tuesday, 24 January 2023 at 12:00 am


Marsupials wouldn’t be marsupials without pouches. Their very name derives from the Latin for “pouch”: marsupium.

Like all marsupials, kangaroos are born at a remarkably early stage of development.

A newborn joey is little more than a mouth and a muscular pair of forelimbs attached to a bean-sized body, which perfectly equips it for its first challenge in life – to haul itself through its mother’s fur and latch onto a teat in her pouch, where it will complete its development.

The marsupial pouch probably started out as a simple fold of skin to protect the helpless young while they suckled in a nest.

The squirrel-like phascogales, or wambengers, have a similar system today. But most marsupials developed more voluminous structures, allowing mothers to carry their dependent young with them in safety at all times.

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