Kangaroos prefer to use one of their hands over the other for everyday tasks in much the same way that humans do, with one notable difference: generally speaking, kangaroos are lefties. The finding, reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on June 18--the first to consider handedness in wild kangaroos--challenges the notion that "true" handedness among mammals is a feature unique to
primates1. "According to a special-assessment scale of handedness adopted for primates, kangaroos pulled down the highest grades," says Yegor Malashichev of Saint Petersburg State University in Russia. "We observed a
remarkable2 consistency3 in responses across bipedal species in that they all prefer to use the left, not the right, hand."
Malashichev's interest in handedness goes back at least a decade, when he reported differences in handedness between jumping and walking frogs. Those studies showed that jumping frogs less often show handedness than do walking frogs. His team later showed subtle signs of handedness in marsupials that walk on all fours, including gray short-tailed opossums and sugar
gliders4, which differed by sex. But no one had taken a careful look at different species of bipedal kangaroos.
One reason true handedness wasn't expected in kangaroos--or other marsupials, for that matter--is because, unlike other mammals, they lack the same
neural5 circuit that bridges the left and right hemispheres of the brain. Studies of kangaroos living in
captivity6 hadn't yielded
conclusive7 evidence either. In the new study, to find out what wild kangaroos really do when left to their own devices, the researchers watched these iconic animals in Tasmania and
continental8 Australia.
"What we observed in reality we did not
initially9 expect," Malashichev says. "But the more we observed, the more it became obvious that there is something really new and interesting in the wild."