Hallu wrote:Of course a more humane way would be to capture those animals...
Hallu wrote:I'm just surprised they're gonna put at the hunters disposal only 4 helicopters...
highercountry wrote:...
A cull such as this is well and truly overdue in the Aust Alps.
Hallu wrote:What I don't get is the absence of a nation wide plan.
Hallu wrote:Australia would certainly have the money for this,
Hallu wrote:It's not like foxes, dogs, cats, and wild pigs who are hard to track and shoot, wild horses, camels and donkeys are easy to spot from the sky, it only takes willingness to do it.
Macquarie Island should have shown everyone just how hard it is to remove introduced species, and how costly. And that was only 13,000 hectares.Clusterpod wrote:The economic benefit by removing a destructive species to an ecology has rarely been calculated, and will be unlikely unless it threatens a perceived tourist dollar or impacts a mining operation.
wayno wrote:in NZ it's a loosing battle eliminating pests. people are talking about triaging our endangered species because of the onslaught of introduced predators that can't be controlled... decide which endangered animals we can afford to save and which are going to be too expensive...
the reality is, we just have small areas that have constant pest control to keep the no's down, only the smallest offshore islands ever eradicate pests and to get to that stage takes a lot of time money and effort.
a million dollars to clear the small auckland islands of rats..
when you've got highly mobile pests in a reasonable sized landscape it's mission impossible to rid yourself of them.
you could be fooled tramping in nz to thinking a reasonable no of birds are alive and well. but that is usually because the tracks are corridors used to trap their predators. outside of those corridors you can be hard pushed to hear any bird life...
the routeburn track now traps predators from end to end and the improvement in bird life is very noticeable over a few years...
so DOC will hammer various areas with 1080 and trap but it just stems the tide of the introduced pests. and keeps some native species from disappearing altogether...
Hallu wrote:
Of course a more humane way would be to capture those animals and either sell them abroad (Saudis pay top dollar for good wild camels and I'm sure other people would for the horses) .
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