The State of the Environment Report claims managing invasive species is ‘currently beyond the resources available’ … we disagree

Our breakdown of the very worst and very best parts of the country’s biggest environment report in five years.
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Every five years, the Australian Government is supposed to release a State of the Environment Report, a lengthy report card that pulls together everything we know about how our environment is faring and the direction it’s heading in. We were slated to receive the latest edition in 2021, but the previous administration chose to lock it away until after the 2022 Federal Election in May.

The newly elected Labor government committed to releasing this report during the election campaign, and made good on that commitment last week.

The report is over 2,500 pages long, packed with information that we will be busy pouring through for many weeks to come. A full 16 of those pages are dedicated to the threat of invasive species in the Biodiversity chapter alone, more than any other threat. But here’s a much shorter summary of what we’ve found so far.

Andrew Cox, Invasive Species Council CEO, with Australia’s new Environment & Water Minister Tanya Plibersek at the official launch of the 2021 State of the Environment Report.

The good:

  1. This year was the first time Indigenous Australians co-authored the report. It rightly emphasises the connection between the wellbeing of Country and the wellbeing of people by tapping into tens of thousands of years of deep knowledge.
  2. Citizen science has rapidly increased, resulting in improved observations of the environment and more data that, in turn, supports more effective management.
  3. For the first time, the conservation status of an Australian species — the eastern barred bandicoot — was reclassified from extinct in the wild to endangered. This was thanks to three decades of captive breeding and releases in seven pest-free enclosures and islands.

The bad:

  1. Every category of the Australian environment, except for urban areas, have deteriorated since 2016. Climate change, habitat loss, invasive species, pollution and resource extraction are causing rapid environmental declines and increasing the number of threatened species.
  2. Since 2016, two species have been officially declared extinct — the Christmas Island pipistrelle (due to predation by invasive species) and the Bramble Cay melomys (due to the impacts of climate change). In addition, large areas of central and northern Australia have experienced declines in crucial Melaleuca wetlands and billabongs due to feral water buffalo, pigs and cattle.
  3. Invasive species were again identified as the most prevalent threat to Australian wildlife and are the primary cause of extinction events since colonisation.
  4. There are more non-native plant species than native plant species in Australia.
  5. Australia has had more modern mammal extinctions than any other continent.
A figure from the 2021 State of the Environment Report showing the 10 invasive species affecting the most of Australia’s 1,533 nationally-listed threatened native species. Data from Kearney et al. 2018.

The disappointing:

  1. Australia’s investment in conserving our environment is not up to the challenge. The 2021 State of the Environment Report confirmed what we published in our recent Averting Extinctions report, that the funding allocated to our environment is a shrinking fraction of what it needs to be. Our report found the amount we spend per nationally listed threatened species is less than a tenth than what the US Government spends.
  2. There was little to no mention of how effective biosecurity is at protecting our environment and way of life. The invasion curve shows us how much cheaper and more effective it is to prevent new invasive species, or eradicate newly arrived invaders, than it is to deal with an invasive species that has established and spread to the point where eradication is no longer feasible. Australia’s biosecurity system is in desperate need of strengthening, and that’s why we’re campaigning so hard for the Decade of Biosecurity.
  3. The report overview concludes invasive species management is ‘a huge challenge that is currently beyond the resources available’. We disagree, and believe statements like this send the wrong message. Australians across the country are proving each and every day how we can successfully manage invasive species. The Wet Tropics Management Authority in Cairns is seeing positive results from its yellow crazy ant eradication program, the Lord Howe Island Board achieved the world’s first eradication of myrtle rust in 2018, private conservation groups releasing captive-bred eastern barred bandicoots into feral predator-free areas were behind them recently being taken off the extinct in the wild list, and organisations like Gamba Grass Roots are spurring broadscale community buy-in to control some of Australia’s worst weeds. Invasive species management is as possible as it is necessary. What we’re missing is the political will from federal, state, territory and local governments to provide the policies and investments that make successful invasive species management commonplace.
Gamba Grass Roots members
The Top End community campaign Gamba Grass Roots was awarded a 2021 Froggatt Award by the Invasive Species Council for their work tackling one of Australia’s most alarming invasive species.

The 2021 State of the Environment Report makes for incredibly grim reading. But its two big lessons are that it’s not too late and that Australia’s native wildlife can’t afford us throwing invasive species management into the “too hard basket”.

This report needs to spark urgent change. We need vastly more investment in our environment, we need a major overhaul to Australia’s environmental policy and we need to support decisive action on the invasive species. Most of all, we will need your support to make all of this happen.

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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.

But you can help to turn this around and create a wildlife revival in Australia.

From numbats to night parrots, a tax-deductible donation today can help defend our wildlife against the threat of invasive weeds, predators, and diseases.

As the only national advocacy environment group dedicated to stopping this mega threat, your gift will make a big difference.

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A silent crisis is unfolding across Australia. Every year, billions of native animals are hunted and killed by cats and foxes. Fire ants continue to spread and threaten human health. And the deadly strain of bird flu looms on the horizon. Your donation today will be used to put the invasive species threat in the media, make invasive species a government priority, ensure governments take rapid action to protect nature and our remarkable native wildlife from invasives-led extinction, death and destruction.

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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]