Why do Marsupials have Pouches?
Marsupials
like
kangaroo and koala are pouched mammals. They give birth
to babies
which are at a very early stage of development,
very small and helpless.
The babies
crawl to the pouch and continue to develop there safely, feeding
on mother's
milk.
Most of
the mammals nourish their
developing young
ones by means of placenta
in the
mother's womb. Marsupials do not have placenta and
they have undeveloped babies.
The baby
kangaroo at the time of birth, is just grape sized with tiny, hardly developed legs.
It crawls
on its own, up to mother's fur and then into her pouch. It hatches on to one
of
the mother's nipples to suck milk. It stays there for
six months and keeps visiting the pouch until it is an year old.
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