Regular readers of The Northern Myth will know that I have a fascination with dead things on the side of the road and I was pleasantly surprised to find this handy little field guide in the Red Kangaroo bookshop in Alice Springs a few weeks ago.
Fittingly the dead marsupial on the cover is a…you’ve got it, a Red Kangaroo, Macropus rufus.
Roadkill is a modest book by Len Zell, an Honorary Associate of the School of Environmental Sciences and Resource Management at the University of New England. Roadkill runs to 102 pages but is packed with interesting stuff – particularly for the newbie roadkiller.
Dealing with dead animals always contains a degree of risk, and I love Zell’s disclaimer at the front of Roadkill. Zell says that he:
…accepts no responsibility for any loss, inconvenience, injury, or feeling of angst, disgust or nausea sustained by any person using this book. All recipes are tongue-in-cheek and anyone considering using them should only use meat obtained from safe sources, as roadkill is likely to be infested with parasites and other not-so-clean aspects.
Okay, it seems that Len Zell has found that rarest of creatures – a lawyer who can write a funny legal disclaimer!
But more seriously, this little book is packed with all sorts of useful (and some irreverent and funny) suggestions.
These include a definition and scope of the roadkill problem, how to avoid killing things as much as possible and, perhaps most importantly, and wise advice about what to do with roadkill and being aware of the worst case scenarios:
If an animal comes clean through the windscreen, e.g. a kangaroo, they can kill you or your passenger should you be going fast enough. Once inside the car the frightened animal may be still able to try to get out and in the process destroy or damage the occupants or a car’s interior. There is very little you can do in this circumstance other than stopping the car, opening the doors and hoping.
…
To swerve or not to swerve – the answer is simple: DO NOT SWERVE unless you are going slowly enough to be able to maintain complete control of the car.
…If you see or hit an animal on the road, ensure that it is dead before moving on.
All good advice. The rest of the book is a sort of taxonomy of roadkill – the ‘spineless’, the ‘wet and dry’, the ‘scaly’, the ‘big flying feathered’, the ‘hairy warm’ and the ‘feral’ roadkill. Then follows a useful list of contacts and websites, a Bibliography and, what is a sad rarity in too much of Australian non-fiction, an index for handy cross referencing.
If you work in animal rehabilitation, spend long hours behind the wheel driving across the wide open roads of this wonderful country or are just interested in roadkill I can highly recommend this book for your bookshelf or glovebox.
Roadkill will come in handy when next you run into a Black Kite as it lifts, engorged with rotting flesh and on struggling wings, off a carcass on the roadside – or when you run into a wombat, a snake, a horse…you get the drift.
You should be able to find the book at most good booksellers – but please take the time to buy it, and all of your books, from an independent bookstore.
Or you can try the publisher, Wild Discovery Guides here.





5 Comments
Any mention in this book about moving roadkill well off the road? It may be a drag, but you’ll save many bird lives and, every now and then, a human one.
Three months ago on our very quiet bush road we saw a young Wedge-tailed eagle feeding off a dead kangaroo, just off the road. We were in a hurry to get home so I decided to return later and drag the carcass over the embankment. Couple of hours later went back. The eagle was dead on the roadside. There are never more than one or two wedgies around here, so that was this years chick lost. A week later I collected the head as a permanent reminder of our neglect.
Frank, yes indeed Len Zell has some advice – at pp. 31-2 – “Any roadkill that you see should be removed from the roadside as far as possible to ensure that the carrion eaters are attracted away from the road and not killed as the feed on the carcass.”
And sad to hear about the young wedgie – on the Tanami track we get large flocks of wedgies (mixed-age groups, but with lots of 1st & 2nd year birds) – sometimes up to ten eagles (plus assorted Crows, Kites, Black-breasted Buzzards etc) feeding on and around a kangaroo carcass.
Sounds like we need a Tasmanian edition – a place so warm and cosy the roads are lined with fur.
Well Kadeco – feel free to forward your comments and photos! I have heard some absolute horror stories from Tasmania – including from people usually uninterested in the collection of dead things lining the roads. The other real hotspot I’ve heard about are parts of south-western Queensland…
ah guys make sure it is dead before touching it. My brother the vet saw what he thought was a dead or dying kangaroo beside the canberra-tumut road and the thing revived and attacked him. His clothers were torn to bitsand he was badlyscratched but that was all. he was lucky.