A newborn kangaroo is small enough to fit in a teaspoon!
Newborn Kangaroos Are the Size of a Jellybean
When a kangaroo joey enters the world, it's barely an inch long—about 2.5 centimeters, roughly the size of a lima bean or jellybean. At just half a gram, it would fit comfortably in a teaspoon. That's smaller than a grape, and certainly smaller than the massive, muscular adult kangaroo it will eventually become.
But here's where it gets wild: this blind, hairless, barely-formed creature immediately embarks on one of nature's most incredible journeys.
The Epic Climb
Within minutes of birth, the newborn joey instinctively crawls from the birth canal up through its mother's fur to reach her pouch. This journey can take 3-5 minutes—which might not sound long, but imagine climbing the equivalent of two football fields as a blind, jellybean-sized blob with barely-developed limbs.
The mother doesn't help. She can't. One wrong move could injure the fragile joey. Instead, she simply licks a path through her fur, creating a scent trail the joey follows using its sense of smell and touch.
Safe Inside
Once inside the pouch, the joey latches onto one of four teats, which then swells inside its mouth to prevent it from falling off. It stays attached for weeks, continuing development that other mammals complete in the womb.
Over the next 6-9 months, that half-gram jellybean transforms into a fully-formed kangaroo. Red kangaroos—the largest species—grow from 0.75 grams at birth to over 90 kilograms as adults. That's a weight increase of roughly 120,000 times.
Why So Small?
Marsupials like kangaroos evolved a different reproductive strategy than placental mammals. Instead of a long pregnancy with a well-developed baby, kangaroos have a short pregnancy (around 33 days) followed by extended pouch development.
This approach has advantages: if conditions turn harsh, the mother can pause or terminate the pregnancy with minimal energy loss. It's an evolutionary adaptation to Australia's unpredictable climate.
So yes, a newborn kangaroo really could fit in a teaspoon. It's a testament to just how differently nature can solve the puzzle of bringing new life into the world.