Bushfire recovery must tackle feral animals and weeds

Some of the biggest threats to wildlife recovering from the Australian bushfires will come from feral animals, including foxes and cats thriving in the aftermath of the fires.
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Hard-hooved feral animals such as horses, deer and pigs will feast on the green shoots of native plants and seedlings, severely undermining the ability of the Australian bush to recover naturally. These large, heavy animals will take scarce feed from kangaroos, wallabies, bandicoots and wombats.

Already in Kosciuszko National Park feral horses are freely roaming the fire grounds, feeding on vegetation that should provide food and shelter for native mammals, small lizards and other ground-dwelling wildlife.

Massive recovery efforts needed

The scale and intensity of the fires makes the re-population of burnt areas by native animals so much more difficult. Restoring damaged and lost habitat will be painfully slow. The presence of environmental weeds. feral cats and foxes and hard-hoofed feral herbivores like feral deer, horses and pigs in the burnt landscape will be a major obstacle to environmental recovery efforts.

Feral cats and foxes are widespread throughout most of the burnt areas across Australia and many will have found shelter from the fires. Cats and foxes between them are responsible for most of Australia’s mammal extinctions and continue to be the major threat to our surviving mammals.  Cats will be hunting for animal prey across all the fire grounds while foxes will be on the prowl in all areas except Tasmania, Kangaroo Island and areas north of Townsville.

The larger feral animals like horses and deer have no natural predators and will quickly expand their range and move into new areas.

When Royal National Park burnt in 1994 a large resident population of feral rusa deer survived. Over the following years they spread quickly south through the Illawarra escarpment, into the suburbs of Wollongong and national parks to the west.

All states, but particularly NSW and Victoria, are still dealing with the fallout today as deer numbers continue to expand from these and other source populations, damaging crops and wildlife habitat.

Post-fire recovery must target feral animals

The months after a bushfire are among the best times to control feral animals, which congregate in the few remaining areas where feed is available. The open landscape makes it easy to locate feral animals and to use humane control methods such as aerial shooting to quickly reduce their numbers.

In Kosciuszko National Park a scandalous failure of management means feral horse numbers were already out of control before the horrific bushfires. A survey published just before the fires found that more than 20,000 uncontrolled horses infest the national park.

While hundreds of horses are likely to have been incinerated in the recent fires, those remaining will make more difficult the survival of struggling native wildlife whether they be wallabies and wombats or endangered corroboree frogs and stocky galaxids.

Bushfire recovery efforts must include immediate action to reduce feral horse numbers in Kosciuszko National Park, easing the pressure on native wildlife and ecosystems recovering from the massive landscape burns and limit the suffering of the horses themselves.

Bushfire recovery efforts for native Australian wildlife like the brush-tailed rock-wallaby must include a comprehensive plan to tackle feral animals. Photo: Mark Hodgins CC BY-SA 2.0

Threatened species recovery

Threatened species are already on the brink of extinction – the massive impacts of these bushfires followed by large-scale predation by foxes and feral cats could be the final straw that sends them into oblivion.

Immediate action must be taken to protect remnant populations of threatened species such as brush-tailed rock wallabies, mountain pygmy possums, long-footed potaroos and long-nosed bandicoots in bushfire-ravaged areas from foxes and feral cats.

Grazing animals like feral horses and deer will also impact on the recovery process for rare alpine vegetation and mountain wetlands through grazing of regrowth and trampling. This threat must also be addressed by quickly reducing feral animal numbers in sensitive areas.

Weeds will thrive

Environmental weeds are another serious threat that will hamper environmental recovery and restoration efforts. Weeds are highly successful because they thrive in disturbed landscapes, and many expand their range after fire.

Many weeds in these areas are likely to benefit because they tend to be good colonisers.

Invasive grasses such as serrated tussock, molasses grass, Coolatai and phalaris are of great concern, as they typically thrive on fire. Gorse, blackberry and lantana are just some of the other environmentally damaging weeds that will benefit from the fires.

Clearly, weeds and feral animals must also be the focus of any comprehensive post-fire environmental recovery plans.

A three-point plan

The Invasive Species Council is calling on federal and state governments to urgently roll out a three-point wildlife recovery program:

  1. Feral cat and fox control: Fast-track feral cat trapping and fox baiting at threatened mammal sites.
  2. Hard-hooved pest animal control: Accelerate trapping, ground and aerial shooting of feral deer, horses, pigs and goats.
  3. Weed control: Target urban areas and disturbed sites susceptible to weed incursions.

Responding to the wildlife emergency

Australians and the world have been quick to respond to the bushfire wildlife emergency, with generous donations being sent to help rescue and care for injured animals.

But these efforts will be in vain unless a far-reaching pest and weed plan is put in place to give surviving native wildlife a chance to recover and thrive in an environment that is not dominated by predating cats and foxes and destructive feral herbivores like horses and deer.

If we fail, we will inherit a landscape full of feral animals and weeds and a hostile environment for Australia’s native plants and animals.

Donate and help wildlife recover

Our incredible wildlife carers will need all the help they can get over the coming months as they carry out the critical , ongoing work of keeping injured and hungry native animals alive after the bushfires.

You can join the wildlife recovery efforts in many ways:

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Your gift is a lifeline for nature.

Our protected areas are being trashed, trampled, choked and polluted by an onslaught of invaders. Invasive species are already the overwhelming driver of our animal extinction rate, and are expected to cause 75 of the next 100 extinctions.

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    Dear Project Team,

    [YOUR PERSONALISED MESSAGE WILL APPEAR HERE.] 

    I support the amendment to the Kosciuszko National Park Wild Horse Heritage Management Plan to allow our incredible National Parks staff to use aerial shooting as one method to rapidly reduce feral horse numbers. I want to see feral horse numbers urgently reduced in order to save the national park and our native wildlife that live there.

    The current approach is not solving the problem. Feral horse numbers have rapidly increased in Kosciuszko National Park to around 18,000, a 30% jump in just the past 2 years. With the population so high, thousands of feral horses need to be removed annually to reduce numbers and stop our National Park becoming a horse paddock. Aerial shooting, undertaken humanely and safely by professionals using standard protocols, is the only way this can happen.

    The government’s own management plan for feral horses states that ‘if undertaken in accordance with best practice, aerial shooting can have the lowest negative animal welfare impacts of all lethal control methods’.

    This humane and effective practice is already used across Australia to manage hundreds of thousands of feral animals like horses, deer, pigs, and goats.

    Trapping and rehoming of feral horses has been used in Kosciuszko National Park for well over a decade but has consistently failed to reduce the population, has delayed meaningful action and is expensive. There are too many feral horses in the Alps and not enough demand for rehoming for it to be relied upon for the reduction of the population.

    Fertility control as a management tool is only effective for a small, geographically isolated, and accessible population of feral horses where the management outcome sought is to maintain the population at its current size. It is not a viable option to reduce the large and growing feral horse population in the vast and rugged terrain of Kosciuszko National Park.

    Feral horses are trashing and trampling our sensitive alpine ecosystems and streams, causing the decline and extinction of native animals. The federal government’s Threatened Species Scientific Committee has stated that feral horses ‘may be the crucial factor that causes final extinction’ for 12 alpine species.

    I recognise the sad reality that urgent and humane measures are necessary to urgently remove the horses or they will destroy the Snowies and the native wildlife that call the mountains home. I support a healthy national park where native species like the Corroboree Frog and Mountain Pygmy Possum can thrive.

    Kind regards,
    [Your name]
    [Your email address]
    [Your postcode]


    Dear Project Team,

    [YOUR PERSONALISED MESSAGE WILL APPEAR HERE.] 

    I support the amendment to the Kosciuszko National Park Wild Horse Heritage Management Plan to allow our incredible National Parks staff to use aerial shooting as one method to rapidly reduce feral horse numbers. I want to see feral horse numbers urgently reduced in order to save the national park and our native wildlife that live there.

    The current approach is not solving the problem. Feral horse numbers have rapidly increased in Kosciuszko National Park to around 18,000, a 30% jump in just the past 2 years. With the population so high, thousands of feral horses need to be removed annually to reduce numbers and stop our National Park becoming a horse paddock. Aerial shooting, undertaken humanely and safely by professionals using standard protocols, is the only way this can happen.

    The government’s own management plan for feral horses states that ‘if undertaken in accordance with best practice, aerial shooting can have the lowest negative animal welfare impacts of all lethal control methods’.

    This humane and effective practice is already used across Australia to manage hundreds of thousands of feral animals like horses, deer, pigs, and goats.

    Trapping and rehoming of feral horses has been used in Kosciuszko National Park for well over a decade but has consistently failed to reduce the population, has delayed meaningful action and is expensive. There are too many feral horses in the Alps and not enough demand for rehoming for it to be relied upon for the reduction of the population.

    Fertility control as a management tool is only effective for a small, geographically isolated, and accessible population of feral horses where the management outcome sought is to maintain the population at its current size. It is not a viable option to reduce the large and growing feral horse population in the vast and rugged terrain of Kosciuszko National Park.

    Feral horses are trashing and trampling our sensitive alpine ecosystems and streams, causing the decline and extinction of native animals. The federal government’s Threatened Species Scientific Committee has stated that feral horses ‘may be the crucial factor that causes final extinction’ for 12 alpine species.

    I recognise the sad reality that urgent and humane measures are necessary to urgently remove the horses or they will destroy the Snowies and the native wildlife that call the mountains home. I support a healthy national park where native species like the Corroboree Frog and Mountain Pygmy Possum can thrive.

    Kind regards,
    [Your name]
    [Your email address]
    [Your postcode]