The Guardian Australia

Giant fossil kangaroos: scientists identify three new species of extinct megafauna

- Sharlotte Thou

Supersized marsupials roamed the Australian continent for millennia. But until now the understand­ing of giant kangaroos – or Protemnodo­n – has been confined to isolated bones and difficultt­o-distinguis­h species.

Scientists have now identified three new species of the extinct giant kangaroo–Pro t em no don via tor, Protemnodo­n mamk ur ra and Pro t em no don dawsonae, which lived from 5m to 40,000 years ago.

The Protemnodo­n viator, scientists say, weighed up to 170kg – double the weight of the heaviest present-day red males.

It was previously thought that most Protemnodo­n moved on all four legs but researcher­s now say this was only true of three or four species. Others moved like a quokka or potoroo, they believe, “bounding on four legs at times, and hopping on two legs at others”.

Isaac Kerr, the paper’s lead author, said the classifica­tion of the species would allow for future research on how the giant kangaroos evolved and responded to environmen­tal change.

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The Flinders University researcher­s took photograph­s and 3D scans of 900 specimens in 14 major museums in Australia, the UK, the US and Papua New Guinea.

They found significan­t variation between the species, such as different hopping methods – which Kerr, then a PhD student at Flinders University, described as “very unusual”.

The difference­s could be associated with adaptation­s to the vastly different environmen­ts they lived in – from arid central Australia to the forested mountains of Tasmania and Papua New Guinea.

Kerr said while kangaroos might be Australia’s national animal, they are “just as New Guinean as they are Australian”.

“New Guinea today has groups of kangaroos we don’t even have … they’ve got three species of giant echidna that eat worms,” he said.

There is no clear explanatio­n for why giant kangaroos went extinct while their close relatives, such as the grey kangaroo and wallaroo, did not, but Kerr suspects rapid environmen­tal change spurred by human practices may have been a cause.

Gilbert Price, a palaeontol­ogist who was not involved in the study, said the research strengthen­ed Australia’s patchy fossil record.

“We don’t have massive fossil records [as seen overseas] … we’re not going to see frozen kangaroos or wombats,” he said.

“People often think we have a pretty weird modern ecosystem in Australia … but our animals are comparativ­ely non-freaky compared to things we used to have in the past.”

 ?? Illustrati­on: Traci Klarenbeek ?? An artist’s impression of the newly described extinct species Protemnodo­n viator and its relative Protemnodo­n anak, compared at scale with the living species Osphranter rufus (red kangaroo) and Macropus giganteus (eastern grey kangaroo).
Illustrati­on: Traci Klarenbeek An artist’s impression of the newly described extinct species Protemnodo­n viator and its relative Protemnodo­n anak, compared at scale with the living species Osphranter rufus (red kangaroo) and Macropus giganteus (eastern grey kangaroo).
 ?? Photograph: Flinders University ?? Palaeontol­ogist Isaac Kerr holds the fossil jaw of the extinct giant Protemnodo­n viator, alongside the smaller jaw of a red kangaroo.
Photograph: Flinders University Palaeontol­ogist Isaac Kerr holds the fossil jaw of the extinct giant Protemnodo­n viator, alongside the smaller jaw of a red kangaroo.

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