| As well as such well known animals 
as kangaroos and wallabies, 
the family Macropodidae includes less familar marsupials, such as 
tree kangaroos, pademelons, quokkas,
bettongs and potoroos.
Ancestral macropods were forest dwelling browsers. Modern macropods are 
adapted to a range
 of habitats; woodlands, forests, rocky outcrops, cliffs and plains. 
The desert-adapted, grass-eating kangaroos arose some 5 -1 5 years mya. 
Traditionally large and small species were called wallabies
and kangaroos respectively, nowadays the name 'kangaroo' covers them both. Ecologically macropods fill the niche of antelopes, deers and horses,
 having evolved lightened, long limbs with reduced toes that enable them
 to cover long distances over open ground at speed to evade predators.
 | | Typically macropods have: small deer-like heads with wide set eyes and binocular vision,
prominent upright ears which rotate to hear in all directions; a moderately long muzzle with a split upper lip;diprotodont dentition; thin necks;short forelimbs with mobile grasping forepaws that can
 hold food, open the pouch and box; strongly developed hindquarters;long hind limbs, with the characteristic long narrow 
feet which gives them the name of 'macropod' or 'big-foot';syndactylous hind-feet: the second and third digits are fused
 together to form a grooming comb; large heavy tails.
 |  Kangaroo Island Kangaroo, a subspecies of the Western Gray Kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus)
 | 
 
| Most members of the family travel by hopping, 
taking off on their hind feet, landing on their fore limbs
and tail, pushing off again with their hind limbs. The  
elongated and very strong fourth
 toe of the hind foot  serves
 as a lever to propel the animal along and bears the animal's weight
 when it stands. Long legs increase the stride
 when hopping. Forelimbs and tails prop them up when they crawl
 slowly to feed. Powerful hind limbs and large heavy tail serve for balance and support.
Tree kangaroos have shorter prehensile tails and climb rather than hop. |  | 
| Our skeleton of a red kangaroo shows the distinctive features 
which enable macropods to hop and crawl along: 
the pelvis is upright, long and narrow;
 the thighs are long and muscular;
the shin bones are elongate  but not heavily muscled;
 the ankle is adapted to prevent the foot rotating
sideways and the ankle being twisted;  
the tail is a counterbalance and prop; The epipubic bones can be seen protuding from the front of the pelvis:
 a feature of monotremes and marsupials, their function is not known!. |  Red kangaroo skeleton ( Macropus rufus)
 | 
. 
Many kangaroo species are grazers and browsers adapted to living in dry desert 
habitats. Their
 muzzles, teeth and tongues are adapted to 
 taking small food items. Their digestive physiology and a large stomach, 
with several chambers for fermentation, can process poor quality
food.
|  | Kangaroo skull:  The basic dental formula of adult animals is 
I3/1; C0/0; PM variable; M4/4 | 
 Kangaroos'skulls and dentition 
 show special adaptations to feeding on an abrasive diet of grass.
-  an arc of blade-like upper incisors surrounds a fleshy pad
 at the front of the palate;
- the two procumbent lower incisors hold leaves against the pad;
- the leaves are stripped off against the edge of the arc of the upper
 incisors;
- canines are absent and the diastema between the incisors stores food before
 it is passsed to the molars;
- cheek teeth are:
-  reduced in number;
- have transverse ridges to process hard grasses
 
- the unspecialised premolars and molars of large kangaroos
 erupt sequentially at the back of the mouth and are shed as they wear out,
 like elephants' teeth.
-  other macropods have persistent premolars 
and four erupted molars which wear out simultaneously.
Kangaroos' reproductive biology can cope with periods of drought 
and lack of food. Macropods have an embryonic diapause that allows 
the young to grow to a certain stage before another is born.
 Most species have about three litters at a time: one in the uterus,
one attached to a teat in the characteristic, well-developed pouch; one out of the
 pouch but still being cared for by the mother. The mammary glands produce 
different
qualities of milk for the two suckling young; the two teats of the gland
 being under different hormonal control.Most species of macropods are relatively abundant. Some, 
such as several tree kangaroos, are threatened, but others,
like the grey and red kangaroos, have flourished and are now 
considered to be pests.