the mum kangaroo has to like it out
yuck i know but they don't have nappies!
As in a limb showing while the glider's joey is still in the mothers pouch? This means that the mom is far enough along now that you should expect to see the joey out of pouch within a week.
The pouch is purely for the purpose of carrying the young joey.
In the mom kangaroo's pouch.
No. The kangaroo's pouch is specially designed to stretch with the growing joey.
When a joey is born, despite being tiny and undeveloped, it makes its way to the mother's pouch where it latches onto a teat. The teat swells in its mouth, securing it firmly in the pouch, and here the joey remains for many months, growing and developing. This is all that goes on in the pouch - it is a protected place where the young joey can thrive.
The joey simply remains in the pouch. It, too, will be eaten.
The female koala keeps her young joey in the pouch, but she does not always do this. When the joey reaches several months of age, it no longer spends all of its time in the pouch, instead clinging to its mother's back.
it poos
yes
Kangaroos usually pouch their Joeys (baby). When a Kangaroo gives birth it puts its Joey in their pouch.
They crawl up the mother fur and out of the puch and the onto the grass but i have seen in quiet alot where the feces are inside a mothers pouch, that only with younger ones though the bigger ones that can stand get out ( yes i am Australian)
Essentially, the baby wallaby uses instinct. When a joey is born, its mother prepares a path for it from the birth canal to the pouch by licking her fur so it lies flat and in the direction the joey must travel. This is actually not to guide the joey so much as to stop it from drying out before it reaches the pouch. The tiny joey uses its claws and front legs to clutch the mother's fur until it reaches the pouch, where it attaches to a teat that then swells in its mouth. The joey stays attached there for a minimum of two months.