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Current News
Forests Spiritual Alliance are staging a rally
The Women for Animals and Forests Spiritual Alliance
are staging a rally on Feb 13th at 9am on the steps of Parliament House
in Spring Street, Melbourne. The aim is to give the Voiceless
- our struggling wildlife - a political voice. On
the back of the horrific bushfires with DSE admitting that years of
conservation work have been lost and the loss to wildlife incalculable,
with Bob Brown’s article in the Age ”Failing our
Wildlife”, the time is right to put wildlife rights on the
political agenda. We are seeking public endorsement for our asks and
urge you to pass the details onto your networks. A vigil will commence
on the evening of Feb 10th and we encourage you to wear black
or black arm bands in memory of our beleaguered wildlife.
We are calling for a complete moratorium on the shooting of our native
wildlife in the areas decimated by unprecedented wildfires over the
last four years. This includes the so called control permits
issued in the farmlands adjacent to the fire-stricken areas.
With so little habitat remaining and so few animals we need to ensure
that some sustenance and shelter is available. We also call
on the government to revoke the pre-election sweetener which gave
shooters access to all public lands for at this time it is a gross
violation and injustice to our native species. With the loss of habitat
and loss of threatened species we are calling on a complete cessation
of old growth logging in areas of High Conservation Value.
Secondly we are calling on a complete reprioritization in DSE with
biologists, zoologists and ethicists to be placed in key
decision-making positions as was the case in the late 80’s
and for a division to be set up for Wildlife Protection to inform and
direct a substantially increased wildlife officers group - not the
handful that we have now. In other words DSE should reflect the nature
of its duty of care to the environment and its inhabitants; our
precious fauna.
Thirdly,we are calling for explanations on
why the government failed to respond to the CFA’s early
request for aerial backup and why the government waited for
weeks before calling on the required aerial fire fighting craft from
Canada to assist in what had already become a disaster. It is
clear that this government’s priorities do nothing to secure
the future and health of our natural heritage and the welfare of our
wildlife. Therefore we are calling on the government to do
the responsible thing and allocate a significant budget to the purchase
of water bombing planes such as the Canadian
CL415s. Together with this we ask that aggressive aerial fire
fighting regimes be put in place as soon as fires commence and that
they abandon the pseudo science they have imported from the US which
allows fires to rage behind so-called containment lines. All this is to
avoid the holocaust which we have witnessed across Victoria.
Areas rich in biodiversity and high conservation value
should be a priority in fighting fires to avoid the current
situation which is a diminution of gene pools and a widespread
suffering to animal populations. This is not acceptable in a
civilized society which has signed onto treaties of preservation of
biodiversity and where our church groups are leading the way in
affirming the intrinsic value of each and every creature in
our environment and reminding us of our moral obligation to protect
them.
And in remembering our moral obligations we
insist that this government allocate monies to the rescue and
rehabilitation of our wildlife to replace the shameful situation we
have now where a few kind hearted folk give all their time, energy and
finances to this heart breaking task. This government has failed our
wildlife and their home, our common environment. It is time
to change because extinction is forever and they will be held
accountable by future generations. * WAFSA (Women for Animals and
Forests Spiritual Alliance)
Killing of four Kangaroos species
The Australian Government has released quotas for the commercial
killing of four kangaroos species in four States (Queensland, NSW, SA
and WA) for 2006. After many requests, we now have population figures
and quotas for 2005, on which they base the 2006 quotas. Nationally,
they approved a quota of 3.8 million. They claim a total population
Australia wide of 24.6 million large kangaroos. I don't know of anyone
except the bean counters who would agree with those population figures,
but unfortunately we don't have the data to challenge them.
Even the Industry admits the kangaroo populations have crashed.
Red kangaroo numbers have fallen from 17.5 million to under eight million,
Eastern Greys have dropped from nearly 30 million to under 11 million
and Wallaroos are down from nearly seven million to just over three
million and there are just over two and half million Western Greys
left. It means there are now almost 33 million kangaroos fewer in the
areas used for commercial hunting than just four years ago - a drop of
over 57 per cent. Kill tallies do not include the hundreds of thousands
of baby 'Joeys', who are clubbed with iron bars or left to die from
exposure or predation in the bush.
Horrific facts on our native wildlife
The World Wildlife Foundation produced a paper in 2002. It was the
study of the Environment based on land clearing in Qld and they
inadvertently came across some pretty horrific facts on our native
wildlife. This is terrible information given that the study was NOT
focused on native wildlife. The study was Qld only...goodness know what
the other states are doing. The document is now several years old and
land clearing has actually increased since the report. In Qld during
1997-1999 humans cleared 446,000 ha of land per year. The majority of
the land cleared was eucalyptus woodlands.In 1998 Qld alone accounted
for 81% of Australia's remnant native vegetation that was converted to
other uses e.g.. Housing developments.
More than 2.1 million Australia mammals die each year as a direct
result of land clearing in Qld; the real figure is probably much
higher.This year in Qld more than 19,000 koalas will die. More than
342,000 possums and gliders in Qld will die. More than 172 million
other native animals species in Qld will die. All of these will die as
a direct result of land clearing. Approx 8.5 million birds die in Qld
each year as a result of land clearing. The biggest casualties are
those that live in eucalyptus woodlands with 6.2 million birds in those
regions being killed each year. A conservative estimation is that 89
million reptiles die as a result of land clearing each year in Qld
alone. Australia has a carrying capacity of 154 billion reptiles. With
Australia's current land clearing trends only 39% of the reptile
population will be here in 20 years, in that time more than 1.05
billion reptiles would have been eliminated from Qld's rich wildlife
resource base all through habitat loss.
Pretty devastating isn't it and very overwhelming, but remember
everything you do whether it is saving the life of one bird, lobbying
the councils and government, rescuing an injured possum puts us one
step further in working towards saving these amazing animals and
rectifying our mistakes.
Our amazing animals need your help now!!!!! Are you going to do anything to save them???
AAT Appeal
A decision on our AAT Appeal over the King and Flinders Island Wallaby
and Pademelon Management Plans has not yet been handed down. We believe
that means the Tribunal is closely looking at the evidence, and
whatever they decide will be a fair decision based on the evidence they
have heard. We also understand that the Tribunal has asked the Tassie
Gov for more information, apparently they are not satisfied with the
level of information provided by the Gov.
DOZENS of kangaroos are being killed
DOZENS of kangaroos are being killed and injured in suburban Melbourne
every week. Wildlife Victoria rescuer Narelle Smith warns she cannot
cope with the large mobs of spooked roos whose lives are threatened by
encroaching suburbia. "These roos have nothing to do with the drought
and they have not come to Melbourne for food or water," Ms Smith said.
"They are simply being displaced from where they have always lived by
industrial and residential sprawl around Melbourne." Ms Smith said
Melbourne's northern, western and southeastern suburbs had critical
numbers of roo rescues.
She wants:
MOTORISTS to drive slowly in areas where kangaroos abound.
DOG owners to leash their pets in parks and open spaces.
DEVELOPERS to be responsible for roos near constructions.
The roo rescuer got her first call on Tuesday at 4.30am. Within hours
she had four dead roos in her front yard and had rescued another six.
Ms Smith is worried she may have to hang up her rescue net as the cost
of her voluntary job bites too deeply into her family budget.
"We've already borrowed against the family home and that money is close
to gone," she said.
If you see an injured animal, call Wildlife Victoria on 0500 540 000
Healthzone disgrace
Herald Sun
A company called Healthzone which sells natural "health and beauty"
products under the 'Aurinda' brand in China and other Asian countries
and 'Bod' in Australia is about to float on the Australian stock
exchange (Herald Sun, business section, 12 Oct 2006). Its most hyped
product in China is apparently an aphrodisiac "essence" based on
kangaroo meat...just in case we thought exploitation couldn't get any
worse. Profits 3m this year and a 6% yield ..the editor was really
talking it up!
Forgive us for being quite cyncial but the kangaroos
appear to have passed the point of no return on their inevitable slide
to catastrophe. Have you seen one kangaroo in any of the drought
photos...or any other species for that matter? That the killing still
goes on is mind boggling and heart tugging. The fact is that NOT ONE
political party has come out PUBLICLY to say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH ~STOP
KILLING our magnifient kangaroos, despite so many years of pleading
with them to do so... This just demonstrates the huge degree of apathy
in the political arena, so what hope have they? From the time white
settlers came here the kangaroos like the aborigines were marked as
John Gould predicted! *Maryland AWPC
RSPCA probes
RSPCA probes kangaroo's death. The RSPCA is investigating the death of
a kangaroo. The kangaroo was allegedly dragged behind a City of
Melville Ranger's vehicle for about 250 metres. The society says the
animal was found outside a house in Leeming earlier this month after
escaping from the Melville Glades Golf Course. It alleges a ranger
lassoed the animal around the neck and dragged it along Farrington Road
back to the Golf Course. The kangaroo later died. *ABC
GIVE ROO RANGER AN AWARD: AUBREY
The City of Melville ranger at the centre of the kangaroo death
incident in Leeming last month should get an award, councillor Russell
Aubrey reckons. The western grey kangaroo died on October 14 after
being dragged behind ranger John Cartwright's vehicle. "At the end of
RSPCA's investigation I reckon the ranger should be given an award for
his efforts, "Cr Aubrey told the Herald.
"The poor guy did everything he had at his disposal to and put his body
at risk to protect human life and the kangaroo's life. "My sympathy is
with the individual on this one."The Department of Environment and
Conservation (formerly CALM) is also investigating how the kangaroo
died when it was being towed to the Melville Glades Golf Course.
However, the roo's death has outraged Native Arc animal rehabilitation
centre rep Karen Pryce-Howells.
"The best thing to do would be to leave the kangaroo where it is and
let it find its own way back to bush at night," she told the Herald. "I
certainly don't recommend what they did, not to lasso a kangaroo and
tow it." Ms Pryce-Howells said had Mr Cartwright called Native Arc, the
fate of the 2.4m roo might have been different.
Ms Pryce-Howells said she would have advised him to call the Wildcare
hotline, which has trained officers available 24-hours a day. DEC would
not comment on the issue, however, the Herald understands that it's the
department's custom to allow kangaroos in this situation to return to
bushland on their own accord. But a Melville Incident Fact Sheet
obtained by the Herald said: CALM (sic) advises try to direct the
kangaroo away from residential area and back to bushland."
This article was published in the Cockburn City Herald Saturday
November 4, 2006.
Ph: 08 9430 7727 Fax 9430 7726
Email: news@fremantleherald.com
Roo flesh as pet food recommended by Golden Glow
Golden Glow is a natural health magazine, they usually have sane
approach to health , environment, companion animal care, etc Their
website is www.goldenglow.com.au However in the last edition
(spring/summer 06) Dr Clare Middle, who is Perth based vet ( she mainly
uses homoeopathy, herbs, reiki, etc to treat animals), has recommended
roo meat as pet food.Could you please find few minutes and write to
her? Please mention cruelty to ex- and in-pouch joeys.
Her email : drclare@goldenglow.com.au
postal address: Dr Clare Middle, Golden Glow Natural Health Products,
PO Box 45, Virginia QLD 4014. Thank you !
Kangaroo Faeces
A team of researchers is about to begin testing the effectiveness of
tasmanian devil faeces in scaring away goats, kangaroos and other animals
from tree plantations and crops. University of Queensland researcher Dr
Peter Murray's team has fed kangaroo and then goat meat to bengal tigers and
tasmanian devils, in readiness for the trial. Dr Murray says he has a
freezer full of the different types of faeces produced by the animals,and
the next step is to gauge which works best on which target animal.
He says tests so far have shown that goats react very strongly to the
faeces
of bengal tigers that have been fed goat meat. "There's no doubt,anybody
who's looked at the actual physical behaviour of those animals when that
smell's there, that they show all the signs that there is a very large
predator somewhere and they're not at all happy," he said. "So we know in a
sense that's our control, we know it works, and what we want to see is
whether a native predator gives you a better response." *ABC
Quest for the Tree Kangaroo
Sy Montgomery, author of a new children's book for
grades 4-8 titled "Quest for the Tree Kangaroo: An Expedition to the Cloud Forest of New
Guinea,"will speak about her adventures at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Zoo Theater
at the Minnesota Zoo. Montgomery's book chronicles her three-week expedition
in the realm of the Matschie's tree kangaroo. Tree kangaroos live in the rain
forests of New Guinea and northern Australia and are endangered relatives of
the ground-dwelling red and gray kangaroos. Cost is $20 for adults and $10
for children ages 12 and under. Reservations are required and can be
made by calling 952-431-9200. The Minnesota Zoo is located at 13000 Zoo Blvd.
Dubbo is deadlist town
Dubbo has been named as the deadliest town in NSW for collisions between
motor vehicles and animals, according to research by NRMA Insurance.
Kangaroos pose the biggest threat to motorists, making up more than 60
per cent of all animal-related claims. NRMA Insurance head of research
Robert McDonald urged caution, particularly during the current dry conditions.
"We estimate animal collisions have cost the community more than $70
million in the past year and the drought conditions still being experienced across
the State have not helped the problem. "Animals in drought affected areas
are being forced to look for food and water near busy roads or in urban areas."
He said drivers should always be
on the look out for animals, but there were certain times of the day
when extra caution was needed. "Motorists should drive with caution at all
times and we encourage them to slow down at dawn, dusk and into the night,
especially in rural areas where animal collisions frequently occur. "If a
driver sees an animal on or near the road they should brake, but not
swerve to avoid the animal." Mr McDonald would like to see drivers helping the
animals they have hit. "If you hit an animal and safety permits, motorists should try to provide
assistance and move the animal to the side of the road to prevent
further crashes. "If the animal has been hurt, keep it warm, quiet and away
from
young children, pets and noise. "Don't force the animal to eat or drink and
contact a local veterinarian or a wildlife rescue centre such as WIRES."
*Daily Liberal
Sad for all concerned. Including the Roo
A WA DRIVER has died after a kangaroo hit by a car travelling in the
opposite direction was thrown into his path and crashed through his
windcreen. The 50-year-old man was driving on Muir highway near
Manjimup, 300km south of Perth, on Sunday afternoon when the accident happened.
The man lost control of his car and crashed after the animal went through his
windscreen and into the back seat.He was airlifted to the Royal Perth
Hospital where he died.
Hard to believe!!
Two children, aged 10 and 11, will appear in the Robertson magistrate's
court next month for beating a pair of miniature kangaroos to death and
stealing their baby from an animal park.The boys are set to appear on
October 11 on a charge of malicious damage to property, but more
charges may follow. Wynand Viljoen of the Robertson police station said the boys
apparently broke into Birds Paradise, a Robertson animal park, on
September 14. "It appears they beat the two kangaroos to death with the intent of
stealing the baby and selling it. We are looking at adding charges
dealing with cruelty to animals," he said. *IOL
Why do they always reach for the gun
AN elite Melbourne school has been given government permission to shoot 20
kangaroos and 20 deer. The permit, issued by the Department of
Sustainability and Environment, would allow a licensed shooter to lure
the kangaroos and deer into a fenced area where they would be killed.
Caulfield Grammar School claims the wildlife was grazing in the school
grounds and eating pasture required for its livestock at its Earth
Studies campus at Yarra Junction. It also claimed the numbers of kangaroos and
deer had increased dramatically over the past six years. But outraged
neighbours and wildlife groups have forced the school to back away from its plan.
Woori Yallock Farm School teacher Peter Preuss said locals were
distressed at the plan to shoot the wildlife. "There's about 100 kangaroos in the
area and if you fenced in 20 of them and started shooting them, it would be
a really cruel experience for all of them," Mr Preuss said. "The others
would be distressed and could start jumping into fences and get injured." A
DSE spokesperson yesterday said permits to control wildlife were issued if
a high number of animals was having an impact on crops or pasture.
"In this case, there is estimated to be around 100 kangaroos and 20
Sambar deer competing for pasture with domestic livestock belonging to the
school,"
the spokesperson said. The permit allows for the animals to be
destroyed as long as the police gave
permission to use firearms in the area, landholders were notified and a
licensed shooter conducted the culling. But Mr Preuss rejected claims
of a population explosion and said numbers had remained the same. He said
the drought had forced the wildlife to move to other areas. "There's only
been up to 100 as long as I can remember," Mr Preuss said. "They're just
moving and making themselves more obvious. "The neighbours
are really upset about this because they like having them around."
Caulfield Grammar marketing and public relations manager Andrew Pelgrim said the
culling would not go ahead and the school was now exploring a range of
options to control the numbers of kangaroos and deer in its grounds. Mr
Pelgrim said a meeting would be held with locals on Monday to try to
reach an agreement.*Herald Sun
No more boxing Roos
THE image of the Boxing Kangaroo was never meant to be taken literally - but
nobody told the organisers of the fourth Animal Olympics in China. In
one of the cruellest displays at the Shanghai show a clown taunts a kangaroo
with boxing gloves tied to its hands. Not only is it cruel, it's dangerously
stupid. Kangaroos are powerful creatures - as Marty Monster famously
discovered on breakfast TV in the 1980s. Although no real violence is
done to the animals in the mock fights, they
are left traumatised and intimidated by the crowds. The event, which
started yesterday at Shanghai Animal Park, involves more than 300 "athletes"
including dogs, tigers, bears, horses, zebras and a kangaroo which are
made to "compete" in a range of events. The opening ceremony featured a
10-year-old elephant named Mary who will
compete in the soccer event and is also assigned as one of the game's
torch
carriers. As part of the opening ceremony, Mary carried the torch into
the stadium before passing it to three-year-old chimpanzee Baobao, who
ignited the cauldron. *World media
Safeway stocks Kangaroo meat
My father likes to say he was one of the first people to taste curried
kangaroo, a dish he cooked up with his South Asian housemates while
stretching pennies during graduate school in south Australia in the
1960s.Back then, kangaroo was sold mostly as dog food, making it an odd, but
cheap eat for students. These days, the lean red meat -- curried or otherwise --
is ubiquitous, appearing as steaks, sausages and meat pies at grocers
and fine restaurants throughout Australian. "It used to be a bizarre thing
served up (at huge cost) to tourists," said Rachel McNamara, a lawyer
and mother from Sydney, Australia. "Now Safeway stocks kangaroo sausages
and patties as an everyday item." There are an estimated 50 million
kangaroos of a variety of shapes and sizes
hopping around Australia. Aboriginals always have eaten the
mild-mannered marsupials, but most of the country's European settlers have been slow
to call them dinner. The meat tastes a bit like beef and venison, but with
a softer texture. The kangaroo -- a creature no other country can claim -- is
a much-loved symbol of quirky Australia. To children, probably more so.
It graces endless tourist fodder, as well as Australia's coat of arms and
the cover of its passport. This might partly explain why kangaroo meat just
hasn't been a big part of the Australian diet. Farmers who culled the
animals to keep them from competing with livestock have long eaten
'roo, but it otherwise was considered a food of the poor.
To this day, nobody farms kangaroos; they are so plentiful the
government
has been culling them to prevent them from damaging rangeland, crops
and fences, and from competing with stock for drinking water. That's the
meat that's ending up on the table. But as interest in eating locally
produced foods gains popularity in
Australia, 'roo meat is moving out of the bush and onto the menus and
grocers' shelves of the wealthier cities and suburbs, too. The selling
of kangaroo for human consumption has been legal in south Australia since
1980,
and for the rest of the country only since 1993. Since then, the eating
of kangaroo has grown considerably, fueled in part by tourism. Exports
have grown, too, going from almost nothing in 1989 to $20 million in 2001,
according to a report commissioned by the federal government. Even the
nation's food magazines have caught on, showcasing recipes for 'roo
lasagna or 'roo stew. Despite its growing popularity, 'roo meat still is
cheaper than beef --
about $1.50 a pound for mince and $4 a pound for fillets at Adelaide's
Kangaroo Gourmet Meats store, which draws in the curious with a sign
that says, "We're game if you're game."
The Kangaroo Industry Association of Australia says the kangaroo meat
business is worth about $150 million and generates 4,000 jobs. The
government says that's closer to $75 million. Either way, kangaroo
shooting is a highly regulated profession that requires considerable skill. The
professionals hired to cull kangaroos sell them to butchers, who turn
them into steaks, sausage, salami or mince. It's an industry with plenty of
room for growth. Despite the culling
program, the industry says the kangaroo population has increased. There
are twice as many of the animals as there are people on the huge, largely
unpopulated continent. Some people consider that a good thing. And an
untapped resource. Local food promoters note kangaroos are better
suited to
Australia's arid environment than the stock European settlers brought
with them hundreds of years ago. "We have ancient, fragile soils in
Australia," said Ingrid Glastonbury, a
chef who owns the Krondorf Road Cafe in South Australia's Barossa
Valley. "The kangaroo is a soft-footed animal. Cattle and sheep are damaging
the soils. We should be farming 'roo." She thinks kangaroo meat is more popular because people have realized
it's so lean. But it does dry out easily and requires care in cooking. "You
have to cook it for two minutes on each side, depending on how large it is,"
she said. "Now it's trendy to serve kangaroo." Media Network item
http://www.pe.com/lifestyles/food/stories/PE_Fea_Daily_D_kangaroo1027.70ae82.html
Queensland promoting sustainable wildlfe
A new project is under way in outback Queensland aimed
at promoting
sustainable wildlife enterprises and encouraging graziers to look after
kangaroos. The Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation
has helped to set up a group of landholders in the Maranoa to assist in
kangaroo management. The corporation's George Wilson says wildlife is often
undervalued, but it could be a significant resource for graziers in
years to come. "Everybody knows that kangaroo leather is amongst the finest in
the world and is probably running around the fields of Germany as we speak
-
makes the best quality football boots - the meat is extremely lean and
very
flavourful ... there's no reason that the product itself can't hold its
own
in international markets," he said. *ABC
Bored kid kills Roo
Western
Australian police allege two youths have admitted they were
responsible for deliberately running down a kangaroo south of Perth
because
they were bored and drunk.
A 17-year-old boy and a 20-year-old man are accused of using their
four-wheel-drive to ram a young kangaroo on the Preston Beach Road near
Mandurah early yesterday and then run over it several times. Police
Superintendent David Parkinson says the local community is outraged by
the
senseless killing of the kangaroo.Superintendent Parkinson says the
youths have admitted to committing the offence. "I actually spoke to two of
the offenders myself and they admitted to me that what they'd done," he
said. "Their excuse was that they were bored and that they were drunk
and that really causes me very very grave concern." Police are also searching
for a group of people allegedly involved in helping one of the youths accused
of killing the kangaroo tear down numerous road signs along Preston Beach
Road. About 90 road signs had been pulled down and thrown into the middle of
the road. Police believe three or four others were involved in destroying
the signs after one of their vehicles broke down and they were forced to
walk. Police say because it was dark at the time, the signs thrown on the
road could have posed a dangerous risk to motorists. *ABC
OKLAHOMA CITY
It began with the kind of 911 call that many officers
might dismiss. The caller told a dispatcher Saturday that he saw a kangaroo jumping
down a road. The man reassured the dispatcher he was "completely sane" and was
not intoxicated. "This was definitely one of our more unusual calls," said
Mark Myers, a spokesman for Oklahoma County Sheriff's deputies. Sure enough,
deputies found the kangaroo hopping along a street and eating grapes
from nearby farms. Using their vehicles, they guided the animal back to its
owner's property, Myers said. The kangaroo's owner also owns otherexotic
animals. Myers said the deputies decided to stay inside their cars.
"Kangaroos can be vicious animals," Myers explained. *BostonHerald
More stupid ideas
LOCAL kangaroo meat could be served as a culinary
delight in south-west
restaurants if the Liberal Party was elected to State Government. The
Liberals have promised to allow the processing of Victorian kangaroos,
which is presently illegal. Opposition spokesman for country Victoria Philip
Davis said thousands of kangaroos culled legally in Victoria each year were
going to waste, rotting in paddocks. ``Kangaroo meat is a lean and healthy
delicacy and there are so many other products that can be produced with
kangaroo byproducts, yet here in Victoria we waste this resource,'' Mr
Davis said. Executive chef at Warrnambool's Beach Babylon restaurant Dianne
Bradley said if kangaroos were farmed and processed within Victoria it
could make the meat cheaper.The restaurant purchases roo sourced from South
Australia.``It would be much better for butchers and wholesalers if
they were processed in Victoria, it would help cut transport costs,'' she
said. Ms Bradley said kangaroo was a popular menu choice and some
people had become experts in roo flavours.``It depends on what they are fed as to
the quality and flavour,'' she said. Executive officer of the Kangaroo
Industry Association of Australia John Kelly said the popularity of roo meat had
increased significantly in the past decade.``It's increased by about 30
per cent for each of the last five years,'' he said. ``It's expanded quite
dramatically in the last couple of years and is now available in
supermarkets across the country.'' A State Government spokeswoman said
there were good reasons for not allowing the processing of kangaroos.``We
don't have a very large kangaroo population and as a result it's probably not
enough to support the development of a kangaroo industry based on the
harvest of wild kangaroos in Victoria,'' she said. *Standard
Tammars fighting fit
Rare tammar wallabies, once thought to be extinct,
have developed such good
survival instincts since being released into a South Australian
national park that more have been added. Another 36 of the species have been
placed in the Innes National Park on SA's Yorke Peninsula - the third group to
be released by the SA Government this year. Earlier this year eight of the
marsupials were released in two groups as a trial and have since
produced 10 offspring in the park, Environment Minister Gail Gago said. "These
animals have now clearly developed survival skills for the Innes environment
and form the nucleus from which the population can expand,'' Ms Gago said.
Tammar wallabies had been extinct on the SA mainland since the 1920s,
she said. *News.com
Bob Brown and EPBC act
The Federal Environment Minister Ian
Campbell has presented to Parliament
more than 400 pages of amendments to the EPBC Act, claiming the laws
will be amended so major developments are considered in a local and regional
context, rather than individually. Senator Campbell says one change
will be the process of public nominations for heritage listings. "What I'm
doing there is that I am in no way discouraging public nominations, but I'm
making it quite clear that the Minister and the Government should be
responsible for setting priorities and determining what nominations are assessed,"
he said. The Greens Senator Bob Brown says the changes will shut the public out
of an
important process. "From the nominations system, and of course from the
whole series of processes which are no longer going to exist," Senator Brown said.
"While the corporate sector gets the streamlining they want, the removal of
red tape it's called, but really what it means is the removal of green
tape."Apparently one of the processes to go will be the opportunity for green
groups to challenge poor Government decisions through the
Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (AAT). The AAT has been the last resort for groups to
challenge bad decisions made by Federal bureaucrats and Ministers. It
was established in 1982, and has been used by community groups to challenge
kangaroo, possum, and wallaby commercial kill programs, elephant
imports,
over-fished marine species, and other poor decisions. In 1986 wildlife
groups challenged the Queensland Kangaroo Management Plan
and won the Appeal, although they failed to stop the kill. You can read
about it here. http://www.kangaroo-protection-coalition.com/ In 2002
the National Kangaroo Protection Coalition challenged the NSW
Kangaroo Kill Plan, and lost the Appeal. You can read about it
http://www.kangaroo-protection-coalition.com/ Again in 2003 the NKPC
challenged the WA, SA, and Qld kangaroo Plan again,
and lost the Appeal. However in both the Appeals above, we forced
changes to
the process that made it far more difficult for the Feds to
"rubberstamp" wildlife management Plan approvals. We discovered under
cross-examination
that all the States had overshot the kangaroo quotas, in the case of
WA, by 15,000 animals. We are still waiting for a decision on the King and
Flinders
Island Wallaby Management Plans which we Appealed against this year. If
the Amendments are approved by Parliament, we step back into the bad
old ‘70’s, when most of the community believed wildlife were no more than
pests. We know the situation has changed now in 2006, with most people
in
the broader community aware of the value of wildlife, thanks to the
efforts
of Steve Irwin, the wildlife carers, and many others. But that
doesn’t
stop our political representatives from destroying habitat and killing
wildlife in the name of development. In the words of Bob Brown, "While
the corporate sector gets the streamlining they want, the removal of red
tape it's called, but really what it means is the removal of green tape."
More on this issue later.* WPAA
More Chefs with old ideas
Kangaroo, once sold mostly as dog food and an odd but cheap eat for
students, has begun appearing as steaks, sausages and meat pies at
grocers
and restaurants. Kangaroo curry, even, has reached the Outback. Gavin
Rehn, a farmer on the remote Eyre Peninsula, is known for his 'roo vindaloo,
a dish he and some workmates cooked up over a campfire with a kangaroo
tail and a bottle of vindaloo sauce."We have to cull them anyway," said
Rehn, 40. "If there's a nice young one, we'll eat it." There are an estimated 50
million kangaroos hopping around Australia.
Aboriginals have long eaten the mild-mannered marsupials which taste a
bitlike beef and venison, but with a softer texture. The kangaroo, a
creature
no other country can claim, is a much-loved symbol of quirky Australia.
It graces endless tourist fodder, as well as Australia's coat of arms and
its passport. This might partly explain why kangaroo meat just hasn't been
a big part of the Australian diet. Farmers who culled the animals —
estimated to outnumber humans 2 to 1 — to keep them from competing with
livestock have long eaten 'roo. To this day, nobody farms kangaroos; they are so
plentiful the government
culls them and the meat is sold. The selling of kangaroo for human
consumption has been legal in South Australia since 1980, and for the
rest of the country only since 1993. Exports have grown, too, going from
almost nothing in 1989 to $20 million (U.S.) in 2001, according to a federal
report. Chef Ingrid Glastonbury thinks kangaroo meat is more popular
because people have realized it's so lean. But, she says, it does dry out
easily and requires care in cooking. *AP, Toronto Star, Nov 4th. Ed Comment; Note
that the Kangaroo Industry have just reveived another large
grant from the Fed Gov to promote the sale of kangaroo meat, thats
wherethis garbage is coming from!
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