Super Marsupials
Before you were born, you most likely lived inside of your mother's womb for about 40 weeks. During that time you grew from being a one-celled human life form (called a zygote) to a baby made up of billions of cells. In nine months, you grew arms, legs, eyes, ears, fingers, toes, lungs, and everything else that goes along with being a baby. This is the way God designed humans to begin their lives—inside of their mothers for about nine months of growth and development.
Many animals also spend several months developing inside of their mothers before birth. Buffalo, moose, cows, and otters all remain in their mothers about the same amount of time prior to delivery as humans do.
Some animals, known as marsupials (mar-SOO-pee-uhls), spend far less time inside of their mother's womb. Marsupials often are born after only a few days or weeks and may weigh less than one ounce at birth. Since marsupials are born so early, and are unable to cope very well outside of their mother's body, God designed mother marsupials with a special pouch (or a fold of skin) where baby marsupials continue to grow. The mother's pouch is called a "marsupium," from which we get the name marsupial.
When a marsupial (such as a kangaroo) is born, it is born with the God-given instinct to wiggle across its mother's body until it finds her pouch. In the pouch, the baby marsupial is able to stay warm and safe, while suckling milk from its mother. Some mothers bear and nurse only one baby at a time. Others, like the opossum, can have up to 16 babies at a time. As baby marsupials grow, they will eventually leave their mother's pouch, but they may continue crawling in and out of the marsupium for more than a year.
God made marsupials in a variety of sizes. Some, like kangaroos, can grow to be nine feet long from head to tail, while others, such as marsupial mice, are only about five inches long. Kangaroos are among the most well-known marsupials, along with koalas, opossums, wombats, and Tasmanian devils. Some of the lesser known marsupials include bandicoots, marsupial moles, and marsupial mice.
Marsupial Facts
Marsupial Highlights