Necrophages are animals that feed on decomposing dead animal biomass, such as the muscle and soft tissue of carcasses and corpses (also known as carrion). The term derives from Greek nekros, meaning 'dead', and phagein, meaning 'to eat'. Many hundreds of necrophagous species have been identified including invertebrates in the insect, malacostracan and gastropod classes and vertebrates such as vultures, hyenas, quolls and wolves.
Necrophagous insects are important in forensic science as the presence of some species (e.g. Calliphora vomitoria) in a body, coupled with information on their development stage (e.g. egg, larva, pupa), can yield information on time of death. Information on the insect species present can also be used as evidence that a body has been moved, and analysis of insect tissue can be used as evidence that drugs or other substances were in the body.