Great Red Kang'aroo.
Kängurus ruf us, Desm. Mamm. Supp., p. 541.—Gray, in Griff. Anim. Kingd., vol. v. p. 202.
laniger, Gaim. Bull., des Sei. par la Soc. Philom., aimée 1822, p. 138.—Quoy et Gaim. Voy. de
l’Uranie, p. 65. pi. 9.
Macropus lanigerus, Gray, in Griff. Anim. Kingd., vol. iii. p. 49. pi. opposite p. 48.
• laniger, G. Benn. Cat. of Australian Museum, Sydney, p. 6. no. 28.—Gould, Mon. of Macropodidæ.
—Gray, List of Mamm. in Coll. Brit. Mus., p. 88.
______ (Habnatwrus) rufus, Waterh. Nat. Hist. Mamm., vol. i. p. 104.
N o t only is this species the most beautiful member of the family to which it belongs, but it may also be
regarded as the finest of the indigenous Mammals of Australia yet discovered; its large size, great elegance
of form, and rich and conspicuous colouring all tending to warrant such an opinion. A splendid male,
which in health and colour fully equals any examples I have personally observed in their native wilds, is
now (1853) living in the Gardens of the Zoological Society in the Regent’s Park, and, although it has not
yet attained the stature of a fully adult animal, forms an object of great attraction to the visitors, and
particularly to those naturalists who take an interest'in the singular Mammals of Australia. This fine
example is the first that I have seen alive in Europe ; and it will be much to be regretted if a female cannot
be procured, for in all probability the success which has attended the introduction of the Common
Kangaroo and other members of the family would also wait upon the domesticatiou of this noble animal,
and ultimately lead to the perpetuation of its race in Europe; an object of the highest importance, since
from the limited extent of its native habitat, daily encroached upon by civilized man, and the wanton manner
in which it is unrelentingly killed, it is constantly becoming more and more scarce in the open plains and
low grassy hills of its native land. The kind of country it frequents being of the utmost value to the pastoral
portion of the Australian community, it is diligently sought for and occupied as soon as found, for
depasturing their immense flocks and herds, in the stockmen and keepers of which, aided by their fleet,
powerful, and well-trained dogs, the Red1 Kangaroo finds an enemy which at once drives it from all newly
occupied districts, and which will ultimately lead to its entire extirpation, unless some law be enacted for its
preservation; and to this point I would direct the attention of the present enlightened Governor and
Assembly of New South Wales, who surely will not hesitate to make some provision for the protection of
this noble animal, as well as for some other fine species of the family still inhabiting that Colony ; in fact, if
this be not done, a few years will see them expunged from the Fauna of Australia.
The range of the Great Red Kangaroo, so far as it is yet known, extends over the plains of the interior
of the Colonies of New South Wales, Port Philip, and South Australia; I have never seen a specimen from
the country to the westward of the latter colony, or from the northward of the latitude of Moreton Bay ;
the plains bordering the rivers Gwydyr, Namoi, Morumbidgee, Darling and Murray, and the grassy hills of
South Australia, particularly those to the northward of Adelaide, are the districts over which it formerly
ranged in abundance, and in which, notwithstanding the persecution to which it has been subjected, it may
still be found, though in much smaller numbers. It does not so strictly affect the rich grassy plains as the
Common Kangaroo (Macropus major), but evinces a greater partiality for the sides of the low stony hills
and patches of hard ground clothed with box, intersecting those alluvial flats. In this part of its economy,
as well as in the structure of its hinder feet, the greater length of its arms, the comparative nakedness of
its muzzle, and in the much smaller size of the female compared with the females of the true Macropi, and in
the difference in the colouring of the sexes, it is most intimately allied to the Great Rock Walleroos, to which
I have given the generic name of Osphranter, and hence I have been induced to associate it with the
members of that genus, and to call it Osphranter rufus, which latter or specific name has the priority over
that of laniger assigned to it by M. Gaimard, and under which it appears in my “ Monograph of the Macro-
podidfle.” It is to be regretted that the colouring of the fur of this fine animal cannot by any means be
preserved after death if exposed to light; nothing can be more different than its colour on the living
animal and that of the mounted specimens in the National Museum, which were procured by myself while
in Australia; so great in fact is the difference, that they might readily be mistaken for two different animals.
The beautiful pink hue of the throat and chest appears to be due to some peculiar exudation from the skin
rather than to the colouring of the hair itself; for if those parts be rubbed with a white handkerchief, a pinky
pollen-like substance will be found adhering to i t : this tint is deeper at some seasons than at others, and is
probably developed under some particular condition of the animal.
The female is still more gracefully and elegantly formed than the male, and has a very different style of