Missing in action: our new biodiversity strategy

Australia’s new ten-year biodiversity strategy is a huge disappointment for invasive species and for biodiversity in general.
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Photo: MomentsForZen | Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Australia’s new ten-year biodiversity strategy is a huge disappointment for invasive species and for biodiversity in general.

While the strategy sets out the broad goals of government and how progress will be measured, it fails to define what progress looks like or how it will get there. For addressing invasive species, the greatest threat to Australia’s plants and animals alongside habitat loss and climate change, this approach will perpetuate the lack of focus that has hampered progress over the last decade.

On 8 November 2019, national, state and territory environment ministers endorsed a new biodiversity strategy for Australia. This strategy covers the period 2019-2030, replacing Australia’s Biodiversity Conservation Strategy 2010-30.

The new strategy, Australia’s Strategy for Nature 2019-2030, recognises invasive species as a major threat, but fails to set out clearly how this threat will be addressed.

All objectives, no actions

It is hard to see what implementation looks like since there is no target and no mention of actions, just objectives and performance measures.

Under goal 2, ‘Care for nature in all its diversity’, one of the five objectives is to‘Reduce threats and risks to nature and build resilience’.

Using non-prescriptive language, this objective explains, ‘Major threats to nature include habitat loss and degradation, invasive species, overharvesting, pollution, climate change and disease. Options for joint action to reduce threats and their impacts include…establishing robust mechanisms to respond effectively to new and emerging threats. … threat abatement activities could include targeted pest management.’

This hardly clarifies how the biggest threats facing biodiversity will be addressed.

In relation to invasive species, there is no target, but instead two performance measures for this objective:

  1. Extent and success of management programs for established invasive species that pose a significant threat to species and/or ecosystems that are vulnerable to this threat and
  2. Extent and success of management programs to minimise incursion and spread of new and emerging invasive species.

The performance measures are meaningless without a target and appear to measure the wrong result. These measures will record management effort, but not necessarily Australia’s progress with reducing the extent, number and impact of invasive species themselves.

So how does the strategy say it will deliver the promised goals and objectives? The strategy has a section on ‘How we will get there’. It focuses on leadership and direction-setting, evaluation and reporting and a new web portal for reporting progress called Australia’s Nature Hub. This section covers a page and remains general. The whole strategy is devoid of actions and activities except those relating to reporting and sharing information.

Better than the last ten years?

The last ten years of invasive species prevention and management has not been helped by the previous biodiversity strategy for the preceding decade.
While invasive species featured more prominently in the 2010-30 plan they were also without specific actions. At least it had a specific target.

There was a 320-word section on invasive species since they were rated as one of the six primary threats to Australia’s biodiversity. Invasive species was target seven of the strategy’s ten targets. This target was ‘By 2015, reduce by at least 10% the impacts of invasive species on threatened species and ecological communities in terrestrial, aquatic and marine environments.’ This arbitrary and difficult to achieve target was rendered meaningless since during the following ten years there was never an attempt to provide a baseline of impact, nor specific plans developed and funded to significantly reduce invasive species impacts. With the exception of the good progress over the last couple of years, measures to eradicate and contain environmental harmful invasive species were weak.

The 2010 strategy’s actions failed to directly deal with invasive species. Invasive species received no special mention where it mattered. Under the subpriority that seeks to reduce threats to biodiversity, there was an outcome: ‘reduction in the impacts of significant invasive species on biodiversity’ yet there was no specific action to give effect to this. Instead there was a reliance on biosecurity reforms proposed in 2008 and the national pest and weed strategies which were themselves weak on action and didn’t cover the full range of invasive species threats.

A strategy worth having?

The new biodiversity strategy is aspirational. It has useful ambitions that encourage Australians to connect with nature, care for nature, and share and build knowledge. But a good strategy needs to drive results.

Addressing wicked problems like the threat of invasive species require concerted programs and collaborative long-term strategies. Other government strategies like those relating to biosecurity and pest and weed management will assist, but the biodiversity strategy does nothing more that state the problem and a desire to fix it.

Australia’s Strategy for Nature 2019-2030 is hardly worth having without a government program to implement it.

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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.

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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]