maddog wrote:Grazing animals have many impacts, one of which is reducing fuel loads by thinning vegetation.
maddog wrote:Given that you purport to have a grasp of rudimentary ecological processes, I assume you understand that woodlands and open forests are generally not self perpetuating, that in the absence of external disturbance they have a tendency to degenerate into closed forests. Given that the latter are a common forest type within the conservation estate, this conversion reduces complexity when viewed at a landscape level.
Wild horses, along with other mega-fauna surrogates, have been shown to affect native tree mortality in Australia. Horses do this by the trampling of seedlings / saplings and the chewing and stripping of bark. These qualities can help to maintain woodland settings which may otherwise be lost.
highercountry wrote:I may entertain a slightly more open mind to your suggestions.
Habitat
Diprotodon preferred semi-arid plains, savannahs and open woodlands, and is generally absent from hilly, forested coastal regions (where a smaller diprotodontid, Zygomaturus, is usually found). Diprotodon is known from some coastal localities, including Naracoorte Caves and Kangaroo Island in South Australia. However, these areas may have been further from the coast in the Pleistocene when sea levels were lower.
Australian Pleistocene habitats changed over time in response to the changing climate (termed the Pleistocene oscillations). Dry, windy conditions alternated with more equable conditions throughout this period, and sea levels were generally much lower than today as ice was locked in polar regions. Extended droughts would have made much of inland Australia uninhabitable; hundreds of individuals have been found at the centre of Lake Callabonna in northern South Australia, trapped in the mud as the lakebed dried out. On the Darling Downs in Queensland, one study of Diprotodon habitat has found that areas once covered in woodlands, vine thickets and scrublands gave way to grasslands as the climate became drier.
- See more at: http://australianmuseum.net.au/Diprotod ... N8CzV.dpuf
maddog wrote:Let us not pretend that ecologists have all the answers.
maddog wrote:NNW,
We should not necessarily assume that the impact of these herbivores is on balance negative. I’m sure they contribute to localized erosion and the sedimentation of creeks, spread weeds, nutrient influx, soil compaction, etc. But let us keep all of this in perspective. Would this fine fellow not have done the same if given the opportunity?
maddog wrote:Is that right Hallu? Not that it matters but the distribution the of the Diprotodon optimum was near continent wide. It had a similar range to that of the Eastern Grey Kangaroo today.
Giddy_up wrote:If the horses are removed permanently via a cull and the numbers that people believe are correct, it will see 40,000 animals shot.
I'm not sure how the world will react to that!!!!!!!!!! I'm not sure how I would react to that???
Its a lot of death............
north-north-west wrote:Giddy_up wrote:If the horses are removed permanently via a cull and the numbers that people believe are correct, it will see 40,000 animals shot.
I'm not sure how the world will react to that!!!!!!!!!! I'm not sure how I would react to that???
Its a lot of death............
They are going to die anyway - it's the one certainty in life. A complete cull simply means that there won't be any replacements to die in the future. It also means that all the damage they and their descendants would have done doesn't occur.
Giddy_up wrote:If the horses are removed permanently via a cull and the numbers that people believe are correct, it will see 40,000 animals shot.
I'm not sure how the world will react to that!!!!!!!!!! I'm not sure how I would react to that???
Its a lot of death............
highercountry wrote:Giddy_up wrote:If the horses are removed permanently via a cull and the numbers that people believe are correct, it will see 40,000 animals shot.
I'm not sure how the world will react to that!!!!!!!!!! I'm not sure how I would react to that???
Its a lot of death............
Despite the sensationalised melodrama and media hype created over a 600 horse cull in the Guy Fawkes National Park some time ago, horses and donkeys are routinely shot in the arid inland country of Central Australia. Thousands are culled at any one time. Out of sight, out of mind.
In a Parks Vic closed forum I attended a couple of years ago a professional shooter (not the Hunter and Fishers rednecks) quoted figures of aerially shooting between 300 to 400 horses per day, per man.
Quick, clean, RSPCA approved and professional.
Aerially culling is the only viable and effective method.
Giddy_up wrote:It can't be that quick and clean, charges were brought agains the NPWS by the RSPCA in relation to Guy Fawkes. Only reason they didn't go further was the fact that there was a plea bargain by NPWS.
highercountry wrote:Giddy_up wrote:It can't be that quick and clean, charges were brought agains the NPWS by the RSPCA in relation to Guy Fawkes. Only reason they didn't go further was the fact that there was a plea bargain by NPWS.
Charges were laid under intense political pressure applied to the RSPCA in response to a whipped up media frenzy.
The cull was, none the less, approved by the RSPCA in the first place as are other culls in remote areas and a proposed cull in the the Alpine National Park.
It is not a pleasant business by any means but nor is the sight of hundreds of slowly dying horses in a severe drought situation.
Is culling any less humane than slaughtering thousands upon thousands of livestock for human consumption or live shipping stock in crowded, hot circumstances where thousands also die before arrival at destinations where slaughter techniques are anything but humane?
It is a highly emotional topic.
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