Red Kangaroo
Macropus rufus
The red kangaroo, Macropus rufus, is the largest living marsupial and an emblem of Australia's inland plains. Adult males, called boomers, are usually reddish brown and much larger than the blue-gray females, often called flyers, though coat color varies by region and age. Built for efficient hopping, it uses a muscular tail as a balance point and moves through arid grassland, shrubland, and open woodland in loose mobs. Its diet is mostly grasses and low vegetation, and reproduction can include embryonic diapause when conditions are poor.
Red kangaroos are managed as native wildlife, zoo animals, rehabilitation cases, and, in Australia, through regulated harvest systems. Captive groups need spacious paddocks with safe fencing, dry footing, shade, shelter from cold rain, and low-stress handling facilities, because panic can cause serious injury. Diets are based on grass hay, pasture, and macropod pellets rather than rich domestic livestock feed. Orphaned joeys require licensed, experienced care, and private keeping is restricted in many places.
Colors: Blue-Gray, Red