Eastern Grey Kangaroo
Macropus giganteus
The eastern grey kangaroo (Macropus giganteus) is a large grazing marsupial of eastern Australia, including Tasmania, and one of the kangaroos most often seen in open woodland, pasture, and coastal grassland. It is softer gray-brown than the red kangaroo, with a pale belly, dark muzzle, long hind feet, and a muscular tail used for balance and slow five-limbed movement. Males can become much heavier than females, while females raise tiny newborn joeys in a forward-opening pouch and may have young at different stages of development.
Most human care of eastern grey kangaroos occurs in wildlife parks, zoos, rehabilitation networks, and licensed macropod facilities rather than ordinary households. They need space to graze and move calmly, shelter from heat and cold rain, and fencing that reduces panic injuries. Orphaned joeys require specialized milk formulas and staged pouch management by trained carers. On rural properties, management may also involve crop protection, road-strike prevention, and regulated population control, so decisions around this species often balance animal welfare, public safety, and habitat carrying capacity.
Colors: Gray, Gray-Brown