home
1. introduction
2. biology & population ecology
3. counting kangaroos
4. how many kangaroos?
5. threats
6. kangaroos - myths & legends
7. what went wrong?
risk analysis urgently required
commonwealth listing & listing in other states & territories
endnote
references
appendix 1. kangaroo management case study
appendix 2. boorowa vegetation maps
Media Release
Who to contact
SUMMARY & what you can do
endnote




NPWS Kangaroo Management Unit says “it’s drought” but offers no science & shooting continues. Read Supplementary Submission requested by Scientific Committee
Nomination to List the Large Macropods


Western Grey Kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus)
Eastern Grey Kangaroo (M.giganteus)
Common Wallaroo (M.robustus)
Red Kangaroo (M.rufus)


AS THREATENED SPECIES
under the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995
Picture
Kangaroo tracks, Ledknapper Nature Reserve

20th December 2011

Raymond Mjadwesch
Consulting Ecologist



For Willem Franciscus Hendricus Bergen
  Bill Bergen: who wants us to look after the animals



Observations of kangaroos by an early European

The Endeavour Journal of Sir Joseph Banks 1768-1771:

 
22 June 1770
...The People who were sent to the other side of the water in order to shoot Pigeons saw an animal as large as a grey hound, of a mouse colour & very swift; they also saw many Indian houses & a brook of fresh water.

23 June 1770
The people who went over the River saw the animal again & described him much in the same manner as yesterday.

24 June 1770
Gathering plants and hearing descriptions of the animal which is now seen by every body...

25 June 1770

In gathering plants today I myself had the good fortune to see the beast so much talkd of, tho but imperfectly; he was not only like a grey hound in size and running but had a long tail, as long as any grey hounds; what to liken him to I could not tell, nothing certainly that I have seen at all resembles him.

7 July 1770
...We walked many miles over the flats and saw 4 of the animals, 2 of which my greyhound fairly chas'd, but they beat him owing to the length & thickness of the grass which prevented him from running while they at every bound leapt over the tops of it. We observed much to our surprise that instead of Going upon all fours this animal went only upon two legs, making vast bounds just as the Jerbua (
Mus Jaculus) does...

14 July 1770
Our second lieutenant who was a shooting today had the good fortune to kill the animal that had so long been the subject of our speculations. To compare it to any European animal would be impossible as it has not the least resemblance of any one I have seen. Its fore legs are extremely short & of no use to it in walking, its hind again as disproportionately long; with these it hops 7 or 8 feet at each hop in the same manner as the Gerbua, to which animal indeed it bears much resemblance except in Size, this being in weight 38 lb & the Gerbua no larger than a common rat.

So the coloniser meets the kangaroo.


Picture
Picture


Read 2nd Paper here
1.82MB
Search 

Forward: introduction by
Dr Johannes Bauer 


Contact KangaroosatRisk

Picture
download NSW threatened species nomination on which this website is based 4.7MB





"a most interesting exposé"
name withheld
Game Council NSW

"one the most important conservation initiatives ever produced in this country"
  Richard Wells 

Taxonomist & Herpetologist




Any information copied or used from this website to be cited as:

Mjadwesch R 2011 
Nomination to List the Large Macropods as Threatened Species under the NSW Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995  MESS  Bathurst


Originally printed: 20 December 2011

Raymond Mjadwesch
26 Keppel Street
BATHURST  NSW  2795

+61 2 6331 5858














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