A mother kangaroo has one pouch.
A female kangaroo has just one pouch.
Most marsupials have pouches. The pouched marsupials which are Australian animals include:kangaroowombatkoalapossumgliderTasmanian devilbandicootbilbypotorooquokkawallabywallaroopademelonphascogalequollrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat)dunnartplanigalekultarrningauiwoylie
A female kangaroo has just one womb.
Yes. Amongst the many kangaroo species, males are larger than females, and this includes the grey kangaroos.
Kangaroo rats are rodents. They are rat-like mammals with long tails and large feet like a miniature kangaroo. However, they are very much smaller than kangaroos, with Giant kangaroo rats having a body length of only 15cm (6 inches). Kangaroo rats are not even remotely related to kangaroos, or rat-kangaroos of Australia. Kangaroo rats are placental mammals so they do not have abdominal pouches, but they do have fur lined cheek pouches which are used for storing food. Depending on the species of kangaroo rat, they may vary in shades of brown and grey from a light creamy tan to cinnamon coloured.
There are two syllables in the word "pouches."
none
Yes, a kangaroo has many cells.
There is no species called the Red Tree Kangaroo. The animal which many people believe is a red tree kangaroo is actually a Golden-mantled tree Kangaroo. Female tree kangaroos tend to give birth within the safey of tree branches off the ground.
2
A Kangaroo has 2 legs.
Kangaroos come in more than one colour. There are over 60 species of kangaroo, from the largest, the Red kangaroo and the Grey kangaroo, through many varieties of wallabies, and down to the smallest member of the kangaroo, the musky-rat kangaroo. Because there are so many varieties, their colour varies from reddish-brown to grey, some having darker extremities (feet, nose, tail), such as the wallaroo. There is no discernible colour difference between males and females. An exception to this are the antilopine wallaroo and the red kangaroo, where the female tends to be greyer than the male, which is much redder in colour.