about usactions pagecontact uswildlife linkssubmisions page
the book online

 

EXCLUSIVE PRESS RELEASE TO HERALD SUN NEWSPAPER -
SUNDAY, 29TH JUNE 2003
FROM AUSTRALIAN WILDLIFE PROTECTION COUNCIL

 

The Editor,
Herald Sun Newspaper,
Melbourne.3000

HAND DELIVERED BY A KANGAROO AT 11:15 AM

Dear Editor,

This morning we are hand delivering this letter to you, containing facts for your consideration, concerning the cruel and untenable plight of the kangaroo populations on the Puckapunyal Military Base, which is now attracting a significant voice of protest from the Victorian community. We believe there should be a full and open enquiry into the Defence Department's justification for killing kangaroos at Puckapunyal.

Two important documents commissioned by the Defence Department, and recently released a month apart, contradict each other over kangaroo populations on the army base.

The major document is the Environmental Management Plan which sets out the framework for the future management of the Puckapunyal environment, recommending sustainable kangaroo populations of 44,000 and biomass levels be maintained above 1.5 tonnes per hectare.

The second document is a vegetation condition assessment, and states that the major document got it wrong about kangaroo populations and the biomass levels, and overrules the management plan. Defence Department's recent decision to kill 15,000 kangaroos over the next few months comes from advice contained in this document, and is reactionary. The document recommends kangaroo populations be reduced to 10,000 to allow vegetation to recover from the drought, while at the same time the document advises that reducing kangaroo numbers to 10,000 will lead to high fuel levels because there won't be sufficient grazing pressure to maintain grasslands at low fuel levels. So even the minor document has a bit each way!

The appalling realization is that Defence Department is not able to be guided by the very document they commissioned at tax payers expense, to guide sustainable management of kangaroo populations at Puckapunyal. For some years now kangaroos on Puckapunyal have been killed in the thousands, and it seems this cruel slaughter will continue. This is a direct result of inept and reactive policies, and mismanagement of the land and its kangaroos.

What follows are the obligations for participation in the Land for Wildlife program and an insight into how the efforts of Puckapunyal Army Base, a participant in the program, measure up to these obligations. We could expect the major document, the Puckapunyal Military Area, Environmental Management Plan February 2003, would reflect the values contained in the Land for Wildlife program. However, this is not the case as Defence Department's ongoing mismanagement of the issues become evident from the recommendations in the Environment Management Plan (EMP).

The Defence Department became the largest landholder in the Land for Wildlife program in Victoria in 1996 when they signed up Puckapunyal Army Base 22,000 hectares of bushland in the program. But Defence Department disregard their obligation to provide land and habitat for the kangaroos to live in harmony with other land uses, and each year resorting to short term measures kill thousands of kangaroos at the army base! Rather than providing a safe environment for the kangaroos, it's turned out to be land for slaughtering kangaroos.

The Land for Wildlife program is a key to survival for native plants and animals by providing habitat. Yet as the EMP points out, the Defence Department has done little to provide habitat for kangaroos because the existing shortage of food is a result of invasive exotic grasslands taking hold, while alternative grass species that are more palatable and non-toxic to kangaroos are not maintained. Kangaroos are imprisoned and starved to death. Furthermore, extensive sheep and cattle grazing has long since damaged the ecosystem and drought has exacerbated the crisis. That and terrible fencing is a disaster for kangaroos

Land for Wildlife is intended to provide 'green corridors' for native animals, and habitat for wildlife to live in harmony with other land uses. Yet in the EMP, 'exclusion fencing' is seen as an acceptable method of reducing kangaroo populations on the army base, and to be used to keep kangaroos away from water, thus restricting kangaroo access to water sources. They die of thirst because internal fencing on Puckapunyal separates them from water.

You should be able to read all about this in the two important documents commissioned by Defence Department but this has been withheld from the general public. Availability of the document was promised by the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Defence, Ms. Fran Bailey and Mr. Colin Trinder, Director Environmental Stewardship Defence. Furthermore, the EMP states a willingness to discuss issues arising out of the management plan with the community prior to implementation. But the public and the community has been denied access to the major document? We ask how is the Defence Department held accountable to the public for the protection and care of our legally protected kangaroos?

The illusive documents are: (1). Puckapunyal Military Area Environmental Management Plan, February 2003; and (2) Vegetation Condition Assessment Monitoring Report 2002, March 2003.

We ask that the Land for Wildlife Status be removed from Defence for flaunting their obligations to the Land for Wildlife scheme and as a priority we call for a full, open and independent enquiry into the mismanagement of kangaroos at Puckapunyal.


Yours sincerely,

Maryland Wilson,
President 03 5978 8570 0417 148 501


AUSTRALIAN WILDLIFE PROTECTION COUNCIL
247 Flinders Lane
Melbourne 3000
Tel 9650 8326
Email kangaroo@pen.hotkey.net.au
www.awpc.org.au

EXCLUSIVE TO THE HERALD SUN

Site Content ©2004 Australian Wildlife Protection Council l HOME l Web Design/Editor- Deb Barnden