Global Roadkill Data: a dataset on terrestrial vertebrate mortality caused by collision with vehicles
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Roadkill is widely recognized as one of the primary negative effects of roads on many wildlife species
and also has socioeconomic impacts when they result in accidents. A comprehensive dataset of
roadkill locations is essential to evaluate the factors contributing to roadkill risk and to enhance our
comprehension of its impact on wildlife populations and socioeconomic dimensions. We undertook a
compilation of roadkill records, encompassing both published and unpublished data gathered from
road surveys or opportunistic sources. GLOBAL ROADKILL DATA includes 208,570 roadkill records of
terrestrial vertebrates from 54 countries across six continents, encompassing data collected between
1971 and 2024. This dataset serves to minimise the collection of redundant data and acts as a valuable
resource for local and macro scale analysis regarding rates of roadkill, road- and landscape-related
features associated with risk of roadkill, vulnerability of species to road traffic, and populations at risk of
local extinction. The objective of this dataset is to promote scientific progress in infrastructure ecology
and terrestrial vertebrate conservation while limiting the socio-economic costs.
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GRILO, Clara et.al. Global Roadkill Data: a dataset on terrestrial vertebrate mortality caused by collision with vehicles. Scientific Data, London, v. 12, n. 1, e505, 2025. DOI: 10.1038/s41597-024-04207-x. Disponível em: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-024-04207-x. Acesso em: 5 mar. 2026.