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  #1
FERALS
Old 02-05-2007

I just got home from a 12 hour shift working 3pm to 3am. DUring this time I was patrolling around the Lake Illawarra area just south of Wollongong in New south Wales. During the shift I seen about 6 foxes. For some people that might not be many, but I was in residental areas all night, not out in the bush.

Since I started working in that area, just after christmas, I reckon I have seen over 50 foxes, 100's of rabbits and about 20 to 30 rusa deer around the patrol. During this time I have seen 1 bandicoot and maybe 5 wallabies.


This time last year I was in the Northern Territory on a shooting holiday. While I was up there , again, I saw more ferals than natives.

The point I am trying to make is that this country is being over run by ferals.

If nothing is done the only birds we will see will be india mynas, spotted turtle doves and pigeons. The only animals will be foxes, goats and cats.
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  #2
Old 02-05-2007

In my garden we have the same problem. The feral pigeons are pushing the wood pigeons out.
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  #3
Old 02-05-2007

Meanwhile a certian forestry company is allowed to poison thousdands of native animals in Tasmania
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  #4
Old 02-05-2007

umm .

I have had that too glyn staying half of monarto is covered in rabbit sh*t
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  #5
Old 02-05-2007

It is a pity there is not a way of legaly dispatching foxes in a built up area (other than traps). I have only seen 2 wild bandicoots, both were on fishing trips.
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  #6
Old 02-05-2007

i live about 20 mins walk from the centre of melbourne city and as i drunkedly devoured some microwavble crap at 2am, i have seen a fox walk casually down the middle of the footpath, check for traffic, cross a major road, past the bright lights of the service station at which i was sitting in the gutter of, and continue along his merry way, checking some garbage in a lane as we went.

it was the biggest, healthiest fox i have ever seen too!
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  #7
Old 03-05-2007

anyone really interested in this topic should read feral future by tim low, an australian scientist. or the 'new nature' which is even better.
whilst predation by foxes and feral cats has directly caused catastrophic extinctions in the past, id actually argue that the habitat modification from cattle and sheep has led to more species declines overall, in the past and into the future. not just fauna but flora too. i mean, the foxes and cats have already eaten about as much of our natives out as they can, but the continuing and widespread decline of birds across much of south-east australia's agricultural belt to me signals a new wave of extinctions.
just a thought...
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  #8
Old 03-05-2007

i was wondering how long it would take before someone mentioned " feral future". I bought it a few years ago. I haven't read the other book you mentioned. I will keep an eye out for it.
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  #9
Old 04-05-2007

lol boof, its a better read than feral future. the new nature puts a completely different slant on lots of things, eco-systems etc. raising the ecological IQ it says on the back, and thats about right!
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  #10
Old 04-05-2007

yeah i should give it a go. like boof i have read "feral future" but not the follow-up..
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  #11
Old 13-05-2007

in todays newspaper, NPWS released information that ferrets are turning up in the Blue Mountains national park. this is a world heritage listed environment, and corn snakes are also being found too. what a problem, alot of it stems from inexperienced people taking these animals on as pets, illegally in the case of the snakes. there needs to be tighter regulation of the pet industry i think...
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  #12
Old 13-05-2007

defintally, but it is hard to control.

reptiles nare managed well currently, but exotc birds need more licencing, my boss collects birds, and he said he wished there was tighter restriction, cause he has seen birds kept illegally, and in sub-standard conditions

i should say my ex- boss hehe ( i wasnt fired lol, just better opportunty arises)

CARPE Diem
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  #13
Old 13-05-2007

i disagree about the reptiles. it might be second hand information, but its second hand by blood if that makes sense, that even people working in NSW for specialist reptile institutions are keeping exotic reptiles as pets. theres not really a high level of scrutiny, in fact, the exotic reptile amnesty just sent it underground...and an ilegal reptile collection is much more discreet than an illegal bird collection. you only ever hear of illegal reptiles being found when theres a drug bust...the two dont always seem unrelated either in short, i think that exotic reptiles pose a big problem, particularly freshwater turtles and snakes.
with birds, i honestly believe that the price and licenscing scheme are the two biggest out of a whole range of factors that make the likelihood of another foreign species of bird becoming established in this country seem remote. ironically, native bird species like currawongs ad noisy miners are considered a greater threat to biodiversity by authorities and id have to agree. substandard conditions are a welfare issue that i guess effects all pet species.
i think ferrets, some aquarium fish, exotc turtes and other herpes are ticking timebombs
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  #14
Old 14-05-2007

Quote:
Originally Posted by glyn View Post
you only ever hear of illegal reptiles being found when theres a drug bust...the two dont always seem unrelated either
ha ha, so true. stoned bogans breed the best dogs, aquarium fish and reptiles. but they do love their aerican pitbulls, piraha and boa constrictors.

i agree that exotic herps in australia is ticking timebomb. just look how bad the situation is in the states. and look at how well our northern warm climate is suitable for exotics like the cane toad (can you imagine what anacondas could do in kakadu?). for me legalising them seem not to be the right attitude. the licencing system for natives is a bit of a farce so i don't see how an exotic one would do much.

but its only getting bigger. and unfortunately the whole reptile-trade explosion that happend a about 15 years ago, when they legalised so many native reptiles as pets only made the situation so much worse..

ferrets were always gonna become established eventually...
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  #15
Old 14-05-2007

and even native reptiles are a potential translocation nightmare.
more resources need to be commited to regulating this industry, cracking down on illegal reptiles, etc. of course, we will probably only see this sort of action when a species becomes feral and starts causing an economic impact.
but i do worry about these exotic reptiles passing on new diseases to our indigenous herpes. in california, gopher tortoises released in the 1980s from captivity killed more than 40,000 tortoise as they carried a new lethal virus with them.
 


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