Case Study: Deer Management Program for Royal National Park
The New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service administers a Deer
Management Plan for the Royal National Park (RNP). A number of research programs
over the past 10 years have indicated that large numbers of deer are impacting on
vegetation within the RNP. The Management Plan aims to reduce deer numbers and
improve community understanding of the impacts of deer.
The Annual Report for the Management Plan indicates in 2008-09, operational
expenditure on deer management shooting program was $25,000. The figure excludes
the salary cost of NPWS staff and Deer Working group members.
The Annual Report indicates the program costing $25,000 in 2008-09 resulted in 81
animals removed, equating to a cost per animal of $308. In 2003, this cost was $490 per
animal and, in 2004, $478 per animal. These costs significantly exceed the costs
associated with community-based plans facilitated by the Game Council and the use of
Volunteer Conservation Hunters. Using Volunteer Conservation Hunters removes the
requirement to pay salaries to night-time shooters and also provides highly skilled and
ethical hunters. In the period 2004-2011 licensed conservation hunters have taken over
2000 rusa deer in peri-urban environments in the Illawarra area at a cost of less than $1
per deer when salaries are also excluded.
http://www.gamecouncil.nsw.gov.au/docs/ ... ssment.pdf