Australian Wildlife Protection Council

Category: State by state

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State by state

Esperance (WA) Kookaburra Sighting Raises Questions About Native Wildlife Management

Share this page THE NATION’S LARGEST bird organisation has logged its first ever record of a kookaburra in the West Australian south coast town of Esperance. But given it is the “king of the bush”, one expert has suggested a kookaburra cull could be an idea worth exploring. Sean Dooley, the national public affairs manager for BirdLife Australia, said kookaburras were introduced to WA from the east coast back in 1896 and records show they had reached Albany by the 1960s. But BirdLife had no record of a kookaburra ever being in Esperance before, until local resident Barbara Jones took a drive with her husband this week. “Out the corner of my eye I saw a bird and I thought, ‘That’s a kookaburra!’ ” she told the ABC. “[But my husband’s] comment to me was, ‘Well, in the 22 years that I’ve been here I’ve never seen a kookaburra.’ ” … CONTINUE READING By Emily Smith, ABC News

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South Australia

Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park (SA) With 400 Koala Fire Victims

Share this page No habitat to return to; generous funds raised.   “Originally when we asked for the $15,000 about 50 percent of the koala habitat was burned, so we did have plans on releasing     them into the remaining 50 …   [Sam Mitchell of Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park told the ABC]. “Since then, another 30 — maybe even more — percent of the habitat has gone, so now we have to house them for quite some time until we know we can release them, because we have to wait for the forests to regrow.” Mr Mitchell said not only koalas but other marsupials and reptiles needed care. (gofundme) Park ‘working flat out’ to house injured animals Mr Mitchell said his business employed 12 staff but would slow down “dramatically” as a result of the fires. He said he had been “overwhelmed” with medical supplies and the park was continuing to receive up to 50 new koalas per day, as well as other injured animals. “I’ve always dedicated my life to saving animals and I’m doing everything I can for these guys,” he said. “Every day we’re seeing more and more animals, we’re building more and more infrastructure, we’re going through a lot more medical supplies.” Mr Mitchell said a final decision had not yet been made on how all of the money raised would be spent. “People keep saying ‘what are you going to do with these koalas in a year’s time? What are you going to do with all these supplies?’ That’s tomorrow’s problem,” he said. READ THE FULL STORY: Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park owner featured in viral drop bear video says he is facing backlash for donation deluge By Daniel Keane, ABC Radio Adelaide MAIN IMAGE: A Humane Society worker gives water to a koala on Kangaroo Island. SOURCE: Humane Society AROUND THE WEB: RELATED STORY RSPCA calls for Kangaroo Island volunteers amid fears of ‘second wave of mass wildlife deaths’ (due to starvation) By ABC News

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South Australia

Shooting Australian Native Ducks Starts Again In SA

Share this page IMAGERY: Pacific Black Duck, Coorong National Park. Creative Cowboy. SOUTH AUSTRALIA and Victoria continue post-colonial killing of many native wildlife species, and encourage wild-bird shooting seasons in the states’ wetlands. Peter Hylands explores the wonders of the Coorong (link here) where the guns will be blasting as of Saturday 20 March 2021. AWPC members can support local wildlife groups to say ‘enough’.

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State by state

Another Tasmanian Devil Death — What You Can Do

Share this page   “Thank you to all 22,000 of you for standing up to protect the Tasmanian Devils. Only yesterday, I found another young dead      devil along the road, bringing the death toll to 114 since January 2021.”  — Alice Carson, 1 March 2022. change.org I HAVE BEEN contacting Ministers and representatives trying to get some real commitment from our leaders to protect one of the last remaining health devil populations in our state. But I haven’t received any support from Liberal or Labour leaders. In fact, when I spoke to a lady in Premier Gutwein’s office, I was shocked to hear she didn’t even know that our precious devils are a threatened species. This is why it’s important for our leaders to hear from us. We need to show we care about the devils, and they must too. Can you share the above photo on their social media pages as comments to grab their attention? Simply right click on the image to save it, and post as a comment under Ministers’ Facebook posts with the following comment: “114 healthy Tasmanian Devils have died on Woollnorth road since January 2021. We need urgent action to address the roadkill Change.org/TassieDevils” Post the photo as comments under posts on the following Facebook pages:        Peter Gutwein (Tasmanian Premier) Roger Jaensch (Tasmanian Minister for Environment) VIEW ORIGINAL ARTICLE HERE

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State by state

Wildlife Carers Quitting After 30 Years Due To Delwp’s Hostility Towards Kangaroos

Share this page Kangaroos nursed back to health after a planned fire escalated out of control now face a cull on the orders of the same department that ordered the burn. The very same department, DELWP, responsible for the care of wildlife, actually turned tail and permitted a “cull” of kangaroos, despite being tirelessly and lovingly nursed back to health by wildlife carers! After a planned burn that started the Lancefield fire, they approved a six-month culling permit for the owner of a property that borders the shelter  – because of “damage caused by the kangaroos to the land”, where he runs sheep, and fences.  Surely more “damage” would be done by sheep than kangaroos?  However, the latter animals are economic assets, whereas kangaroos only have economic value when dead – for the pet meat trade! The Authority to Control Wildlife permit application was approved, thanks to the farmer citing his desire to repasturise the land.  So, he can’t live harmoniously with native animals than have a minimal impact on grasslands?  This farmer got the go ahead to kill kangaroos on his property, which neighbours the Macedon Ranges (Victoria) Pastoria East Wildlife Shelter.  “All of the wild kangaroos here have been through that fire, they’ve all been impacted by it. They’ve lost habitat and food, they’ve been traumatised,” owner Christine Litchfield said. Wildlife carers Ms Litchfield and Mr Ward say they are bemused by the department’s “heartbreaking” decision, considering DELWP formerly praised the work of the pair and wanted photos for an internal magazine! “… Keep in mind we’re in a conservation zone, we are up against a large crown land forest. The idea that you’re going to kill kangaroos to stop this problem is unlikely to work completely,” Marcus Ward said.  What part of “conservation” do DELWP not understand?  What sort of Department, except an Orwellian one, would endorse the care and protection of wildlife – injured by their own “controlled burn” that got out of control – and also permit their “cull”?   Wildlife carers say they cannot continue to nurse injured kangaroos back to health only to risk having them shot by a neighbouring farmer    once they are released.  These amazing people spend their own time and money on compassion and care for injured animals, only to    have them lethally “managed”!  Marcus Ward, owner of the Pastoria East Wild Life Shelter, says he will have to close his doors   after 30 years. Under such a contradictory and twisted State government Department, presumably meant to be responsible for our wildlife, administer the Wildlife Act 1975, but at the same time approve of “culls” and the kangaroo meat industry in Victoria!  They can’t be the carers, conservationists and the killers at the same time – they are deeply embedded in conflicts of interests. The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP) decided not to prosecute the neighbouring property owner for animal cruelty, after kangaroos were shot in the body and left to bleed to death.  So, what and when do they actually do to protect wildlife in Victoria? “We can’t continue… knowing any animal that comes here is under risk,” Mr Ward said. PETITION: Call of plan to “cull” kangaroos “That won’t change until we’re confident the culling won’t proceed.”  Without Macedon Ranges’ Pastoria East Wildlife Shelter, Mr Ward said rescuers had few local options for shelters to take kangaroos. “The shelter in Kilmore is overloaded from the area, and the one in Hepburn that we rely on a lot closed their doors to any new animals last week,” he said. Native animals, especially kangaroos, are enemies of Victoria, and land-holders – apparently.   The facade that DELWP have any care of responsibility for native animals is becoming thinner and they are being exposed as more interested in commercial kangaroo meat – and cleansing the State of our iconic native animals – in the name of “progress” and profits!  

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State by state

Victoria Is Definitely Not The Place To Be If You Are A Bird Or A Kangaroo!

Share this page KILLING COUNTRY   Taken from https://www.creativecowboyfilms.com/blog_posts/killing-country   In Australia’s State of Victoria, ATCWs are authorities to control wildlife, for the majority of permits issued and for the majority of animals, control means kill. “In a place where nature does not count, counting nature can be a grim business. The reality is that the Victorian Government knows very little about the outcomes for the animals they issue these permits for. Most of course will be killed, just how many (more or less) is a matter for speculation. What has occurred regarding Macropod species for example is a complete disgrace” CLIMATE CHANGE What is also particularly disgraceful, the usual head in the sand stuff we get from Australia, is that no account at all is taken of the impacts of climate change, which are severe. So instead of taking the plight of numerous species into account, the numbers of ATCWs granted and the numbers of animals involved have increased at scale. The most basic applied logic would give you an understanding that increasing the numbers of animals subject to so called control will only result in one outcome – that is putting more species at risk. We are also disrupting the web of life. “The reality is that most people do not have a clue about what is going on in relation to these matters – the spin from all Australian governments makes it look as if all Australian wildlife is protected and so that is what they believe. And what I find another big problem is that this story is believed around the world. We have done something to dispel this myth in Australia, but not nearly enough”. Peter Hylands There are gross acts of cruelty involved here too. Duck shooting has continued despite the most dire climate conditions including the condition of wetlands and associated breeding sites.   In Victoria, tens of thousands of waterbirds are shot on internationally significant wetlands, Ramsar sites, each year. NUMBER CRUNCH – COMPARISONS In  Victoria in the ten-year period 2009-2018 inclusive a total of 32,147 ATCWs were issued for Australian species covering 1,513,605 animals. In Victoria, the total number of animals subject to ATCWs in the period 2016-2018 was 2.3 times higher than the number of animals subject to ATCWs 2009-2011. The number of ATCWs (permits) issued in 2016-2018 was 1.66 times higher than the number of ATCWs issued in the period 2009-2011. Victoria is also not the place to be if you happen to be a bird, 73 per cent of species subject to control in Victoria were bird species with a total of 397,549 birds, of which 182,721 or 45 per cent were from a range of parrot species. We also need to remember that ATCWs are not the only way animals in Victoria die, so we can add another 4 million dead water birds (I am being modest in my calculations) in the last ten years to the tally in Victoria because of duck shooting in the state. So all up, that is around 4.5 million birds in the state in the last ten years. Politics and nature: The Victorian Labor Government was elected in November 2014 and has increased the number of animals killed across a range of mechanisms. The Labor tally in relation to ATCWs in the years 2015 – 2018 totals 16,010 ATCW permits covering 844,625 animals. In the previous four-year period the Liberal- National Coalition Government in Victoria (a government described to me by friend Dr Hugh Wirth, President of the RSPCA and WSPA (the world body) as extremely cruel) issued 11,146 ATCW permits covering 461,593 animals, 54 per cent of the Labor total. IMPACT OF KANGAROO PET FOOD TRIAL AND SUBSEQUENT TRADE IN WILDLIFE In Victoria, 750,000 Kangaroos were authorised to be killed by ATCW / KPFT permits in the years 2014 – 2018. The number of Kangaroos authorised roughly doubled once the pet food trial really got underway despite government statements that there would be no increase in killing rates once the trial commenced. 390,886 of these animals were authorised under KPFT of which around 212,000 were actually processed. There was a marked step change in the killing rates of all species in 2013, the number again increased significantly after the year the Victorian Labor Party won government in the state. What was going to happen was always very obvious, and when it did occur, little was done to moderate the situation. The numbers tell us that story. ATCWS FOR AUSTRALIAN WILDLIFE IN VICTORIA The first number in bold is the number of ATCWs issued, the second number is the number of individuals of the species subject to control. The period covered is for ten years, from 2009 – 2018 inclusive. For a number of species on the list the number subject to control has increased rapidly in the last few years. Australian King-parrot Alisterus scapularis –2/10 Australian Fur Seal Pusillus doriferus – 8 / 258 Australian Magpie Cracticus tibicen – 195 / 3,565 Australian Magpie Lark Grallina cyanoleuca – 52 / 460 Australian Raven Corvus coronoides – 862 / 25,163 Australian Shelduck Tadorna tadornoides – 120 / 4,978 Australian White Ibis Threskiornis moluccus – 41 / 2,411 Bell Miner Manorina melanophrys – 7 / 570 Black Kite Milvus migrans – 9 / 185 Black Swan Cygnus atratus – 17 / 530 Black Wallaby Wallabia bicolor – 1,337 / 17,682 Black-tailed Native-hen Tribonyx ventralis – 10 / 240 Broad-shelled River Turtle Chelodina expansa –1 / 100 Brolga Grus rubicunda – 2 / 51 Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike Coracina novaehollandiae – 15 / 155 Cape Barren Goose Cereopsis novaehollandiae – 31 / 1,890 Chestnut Teal Anas castanea – 7 / 90 Common Brushtail Possum Trichosurus vulpecular – 56 / 1,850 Common Long-necked Tortoise Chelodina longicollis – 4 / 10,119* Common Ringtail Possum Pseudocheirus peregrinus –19 / 324 Common Wombat Vombatus ursinus – 2,044 / 26,507 Crimson Rosella Platycercus elegans – 180 / 4,702 Dingo Canis lupus dingo  – 14 / 134 Dusky Moorhen Gallinula tenebrosa – 4 / 270 Eastern Banjo Frog Limnodynastes dumerilii – 1 / 10 Eastern Brown Snake Pseudonaja textilis – 29 / 387 Eastern Grey Kangaroo Macropus giganteus – 18,715 / 889,488 Eastern Rosella Platycercus eximius – 74 / 1,535 Emu Dromaius novaehollandiae – 756 / 9,961 Landing image Eurasian Coot Fulica atra – 30 / 1,271 Fairy Martin Petrochelidon ariel – 3 / 320 Rose-breasted Cockatoo (Galah) Eolophus roseicapilla – 422 / 32,082

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State by state

Urban Sprawl Threatens Southern Brown Bandicoots — Western Port Bay, VIC

Share this page Ecologist Hans Brunner: Bandicoots, the problems and the answer. MY CONCERN IS the survival of Southern Brown Bandicoots (SBB) east of Melbourne and especially within the biosphere region around Western Port Bay. This is the site where during the last twenty odd years 95% of them were lost. The reason for the loss of the SBBs was the combination of incompetent and unwillingness by the then governments of Department of Environment and Sustainability, and Parks Victoria, failure to properly protect them there. (So the very government agencies we expect to uphold the protection of wildlife and habitats are actually failing!  Promoting urban sprawl now is endemic to our culture, our economy?  Editor) And now, the new Department of Environment, Land, Water & Planning (DELWP) plans to create a large new urban estate adjacent to the Royal Botanical Gardens Cranbourne (RBGC) called the Botanic Ridge & Devon Meadows. This area was previously covered with prime bandicoot habitat land — and now have to be somehow compensated for. (Strange how the names of some streets and housing estates take on names that represent exactly some of the natural features lost under concrete — “botanic” and “meadows”, editor.) Since then. I have attended four workshops with DELWP, SBB experts, public servants and environment consultants, about 25 people per session. IMAGES: Used with permission from Reiner Richter.  I was extremely disappointed that DELWP still insists in the continued use of only narrow corridors as a compensation for the loss of all the   SBB habitat. I have earlier explained to them in great detail why these narrow corridors will definitely not be suitable for     SBBs.     Unfortunately, there seems to be absolutely nothing that I could do to change their mind. They were also not prepared to apply an  actual     Population Viability Assessment (PVA) to the area. All they did was talk about the use of it, but did not apply it, in order to prove that SBBs   could safely survive in these conditions for at least the next hundred years! To me, this looked like 90% of political overbearing and only    10% of environmental input.    No way could a PVA pass a test here and neither can artificial and narrow corridors be used for SBBs.  I have therefore consistently insisted that SBBs can now only be properly secured within large reserves surrounded by a   predator proof fence. There are several such reserves suitable for this purpose such as the Pines, the Langwarrin Reserve and the   Briars.   SBBs can then be safely protected from dogs, foxes, feral cats and from competition from rabbits. Why has so much gone wrong   with DELWP? Is there not one person among them who understands and loves SBBs enough to give them the deservedly highest   protection available? I now urge DELWP to urgently carry out their obligation and to put those SBBs safely into some large reserves the same way they are protected in the RBGC. I will be extremely frustrated if this is not done. Only the highest possible protection for them can now do. — Hans Brunner

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State by state

Breaking News: VIC Govt Lifts Moratorium

Share this page AS THE BUSHFIRES continue to kill kangaroos, The Victorian State Government has lifted their emergency moratorium of the commercial killing of kangaroos. No wildlife assessment has been completed. The number of surviving kangaroos is unknown. Write directly to the Victorian Premier Daniel Andres today to voice your concerns daniel.andrews@parliament.vic.gov.au Or phone directly (03) 9651 5000 #ShameAustralia #KangaroosAlive #AnimalWelfare

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State by state

Three Days At A Border Fireground (VIC, NSW)

Share this page AWPC committee member and long-time wildlife rescuer Chris Lehmann spent three days on the post-fire ground between between Victoria and NSW around Albury and Corryong in early February.  Here is his first hand initial report and also a youtube clip from that journey. The new AWPC committee supports all community efforts to help bring emergency assistance, including food and water drops, to fire survivors as well as to areas that are so dry that animals have lost their natural sustenance (and that might burn next!) State governments in Victoria and NSW have yet to take leadership or action on helping the wildlife survivors bar a few well-publiced food drops to endangered wallabies. Landholders and the wider community, including volunteers from overseas are leading the way with generosity and dedication. My first expression of what I saw at Corryong: https://youtu.be/NDCmr5BuJpc A 2nd report from the Corryong Fire Grounds, February 2020. (Click above text to link to the written post on the Kangaloola Wildlife Shelter Inc. Facebook page.)   Longing for life We spent 3 days in the fire grounds of Corryong, some 30 days after Corryong was evacuated because of the fire storms that had destroyed Woormargama, Burrowa, Pine, and Mittamatite Forests plus much of the farmland and many homes around. We spent 3 days in the fire grounds of Corryong, some 30 days after Corryong was evacuated because of the fire storms that had destroyed Woormargama, Burrowa, Pine, and Mittamatite Forests plus much of the farmland and many homes around. We were searching for life. Mt Mittamatite is a local mountain forest covering about 100 square kms. There might have been 100,000+ furred and feathered animals living on just Mt Mittamatite. Now, 30 days later, as a result of daily searches (over the last few weeks) well into the early hours of the morning, a local wildlife carer estimates there is 50–100 animals surviving there. He has identified the very few patches of forest that have enough cover and dregs of food for survival and has committed to providing water and food for those few survivors. Those 50–100 kangaroos, wallabies and wombats will be the genesis of the recovery of the mountain. Life is there, we found it — but the lack of water and good food is too real. We need to support these animals for a few months. On Tuesday we [sent] 30–40 bags of carrots up to Bellaboo Wildlife Shelter who will lead the water station and food drop effort.

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State by state

Sometimes Sad And Unfair Things Happen (VIC)

Share this page I HAVE BEEN TREATING this wombat for sarcoptic mange since early June. The 2nd major treatment was yesterday afternoon, when myself and the local landowners were enjoying seeing the improved condition and alertness of this animal. She was definitely on the road back to normal. Julie, who is the landowner, contacted me this afternoon because she found our dear wombat dead on the grass. Someone had deliberately run over her while she was eating grass. The tyre tracks are pretty obvious.                                                                                                                                                                                            — Chris Lehmann,                                                                                                                                                                                  Facebook post. 23 July 2020

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