It
seems that the Great Barrier Reef may not be the only Australian
symbol on the way out
Extinction
Worries Loom As Koala Population In Australia Plummets
9
May, 2016
Is
the extinction of koalas in parts of southeast Queensland in
Australia an imminent one?
Yes,
if new figures are any indicator of the current state of the
country’s biggest, most important koala populations. Based on data
from the Koala Coast and Pine River regions in the last two decades,
huge swathes are now “effectively extinct.”
“There
are already a number of areas in which koalas [on the Koala Coast]…
are at such low densities that they are effectively extinct,”
stated the landmark South East Queensland Koala Population Modeling
Study review, as obtained by ABC News. “It appears the loss of
koalas from many sites there is imminent.”
The
report found that more than 80 percent of koalas have disappeared on
the said area, in and around Brisbane, since 1996. More than 50
percent have also been gone in Pine Rivers, located north of
Brisbane, during the same period.
Lead
author and University of Queensland associate professor Jonathan
Rhodes pointed to loss of habitat, disease and dog attacks as
continuing threats to the koala populations, suggesting concerted
efforts on saving those that still have a chance to survive, such as
in regional locations.
Rhodes
said “tough decisions” may need to be made in the case of
prioritizing koala protection, and focus has to be given to
populations where authorities can succeed.
Nine
months after he received the report, which was released August last
year and covered some 10,000 square kilometers (3,861 square miles),
state environment minister Steven Miles flagged plans to form an
expert panel to drive policy toward the right direction. He pointed
to “some new action” that they intend to start in months, not
years.
“We
do need action but [what] we don’t need is knee-jerk action,” he
said.
Martin
Taylor, spokesperson of the World Wildlife Fund, dubbed the figures
“
horrifying,” calling for “stronger laws to stop the
bulldozers.”
Miles
also blamed former Australian Labor Party (ALP) and Liberal National
Party (LNP) governments for urban development that fueled the severe
drop in koala populations. Koalas, he explained, probably could not
live in areas infested by dogs, and where there are pools, fences and road
In
June 2015, Tech Times reported that the Queensland government
included the koala in the national list of vulnerable species.
Now,
authorities will tap specialists with a “diversity of expertise”
relevant to conserving koalas, including behavioral science,
population dynamics, rescue and rehabilitation, captive breeding and
genetics.
The
members of the new expert panel will likely be identified in June,
with the government expecting the panel’s advice within three
months after being convened.
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