2.12.08

Shooting Wombats

The ancestor of the wombat, the diprotodon "existed from 1.6 million years ago until about 40,000 years ago". The 2.5 tonne wombat-like Diprotodon was 1.8 metres tall and 3.5 metres long. Kangaroos reached 2.5m height at that time.

The wombat today is a surviving shrunk-down version of this mega fauna. 100 % vegetarian, it eats mainly grasses and roots. Home is a burrow which they defend fiercely.

The problem today is, that they are running out of a habitat, or it is fragmented and criss-crossed by roads and dangerous vehicles. Additionally, it has to compete with all the invasive species that have been introduced to Australia.

Formally protected in its habitat, mainly 'National Parks', it seems ignorant of human real estate and wanders great distances to be a wombat. Private landholders of the South Coast and Southern Highland do not wish to share and asked to shoot the 'intruders'. 'Property damage' was a 'knock-me-dead' argument to the wombat's guardians, the National Parks and they handed out 200 licences to shoot the marsupials this year. "Most of these shooting licences are restricted to 10 or 20 animals and that can be the whole wombat population that is on a particular farm"

Soon tourists wishing to see the iconic wildlife of the area, will only be able to view the impeccable fences and pipes of private properties. An alternative would be to bestow effective protection on to the native fauna and require, vineyards and other private enterprises to install appropriate fences to signal their unwillingness to share the land with the indigenous fauna.

Update:

And the slaughter continues:
'Farmers are illegally slaughtering thousands of wombats in South Australia. Burrows of southern hairy-nosed wombats are being bulldozed or blown up on Yorke and Eyre Peninsulas and in the Murraylands. Farmers can get permits to destroy a few wombats, but that it not a licence to wipe out the entire population. Mass killings with petrol bombs or bulldozing'.. abc 011009

Update:
Ten wombats, including four feeding mothers, deliberately run over at Kangaroo Valley camping ground, NSW Police say abc, 10.09.2015

Images:
1. Wombat and Thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger), lithograph, 1878, via Wikimedia Commons
2. John Gould, Vombatus ursinus,"Mammals of Australia", Vol. I Plate 55, 1863, via Wikimedia Commons

16.11.08

Strangling and Piercing Fur Seals 'Unintentionally' with Fishing Gear

Fur Seals were killed during the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries to lubricate human progress. In proud defiance the glorious deeds are continued today, despite the marine mammals protected status.
It is common practice in Australia in the 21 Century to shoot the sea creature with bullets or arrows. Recently a pair emptied 100 bullets in an hour into a fur seal colony on Canowa Island near Wilson's Promontory. If not intentionally eradicated, then they are apparently "unintentionally" pierced, strangled and cut up by the marine debris left by mind-less "recreational" fishing people. Here is one example from Victoria's Bass Coast:
"Over the past 10 years, seal rescue crews have found more than three entangled seals for each day they spend researching the colonies...Thirty-one seals were found entangled in discarded fishing debris at Seal Rocks in the year to June 2008. The shark hooks were embedded deep. One was lodged in the side of the seal's head; the other was caught in the underside of its tongue. It looked like it had a bridle on because it had these two hooks through its head and a wire trace." connecting between them...Material like fishing line starts to wear its way into the seal pretty quickly, then they get wounds opening up and they can die of dehydration because they've got these big open wounds weeping all the time. Squid jigs and hooks create the most gruesome scenes, while recent missions have also found seals trapped in a pair of fisherman's overalls and another seal was found sporting a degraded baseball cap."

The fin-footed mammals escaping fishing debris have to deal with other human 'debris, toxic pollution and oil spills'.

Toothless 'appeals' do not pose effective conservation of the species. Make "recreational taking" with such a high by-kill rate illegal in wildlife protected areas and densely populated areas. Enforce the law, otherwise the 'ecotourism' industry will get to see 'Seal Rocks' in name only, as it is so common in Australia.
Images:
1. Baldung Grien, Hans, 1516 (altered) via Zeno
2. Skeleton of a seal, A. Brehm, (altered) via Zeno

>> Peppered Seal or Peppered Tasmanian Salmon? The Habitat Grab

21.10.08

Leatherback Turtles out of a Habitat

For 100 million years the giant leatherback turtle (Dermochelyidae) swam in the warm and open oceans and sought to lay its eggs on a beach. It can get up to 3m long, can weigh up to 550 to 1,545 pounds (250-700 kg). The dinosaurs, came and went, but the largest living sea turtle continued on its long migration paths. One has been recorded swimming 20,000-kilometers (13,000-miles), from Indonesia to the U.S. looking for food. It loves eating jellyfish and other marine invertebrates. The the human species expanded and robbed it of all of its habitat.

The Beaches ashore - no place to nest
  • Beachfront developments, infrastructure and the activities of people destroy their habitat
  • SUVs on beaches damage the eggs and light pollution disorients the hatchling orientation.
  • Poaching turtles, eggs, leather or oil or commercializing the 'out-door zoo' is devastating
  • Nesting beaches are disappearing through human caused global warming-induced sea level rises and cyclone destruction.

At the Ocean of foreshore - a dangerous place to be

No Place to Live
Swimways - lobbying for turtle real estate
To reduce the risks for the sea turtle in "areas of highest risk/interaction with fisheries" 'safe swimways' are to be created. "The IUCN is urging nations to protect the leatherback turtle from the world's industrial fisheries by identifying and creating marine protected areas along the Pacific leatherback's migratory routes. " It is to be seen what coastal habitat is put aside for the giant to reproduce and not hit the extinction vortex.
A giant jelly bloom in a dead sea is sure to be left behind without the jelly eater. "If current trends continue, Pacific leatherbacks are predicted to go extinct within the next few decades...Now it's time to turn the high-tech science into political will and conservation action for critically endangered leatherbacks."

Images:
1. Part of Chelonia, E.Haeckel via Wikipedia
2. Discomedusa, plate 8, E.Haeckel via Zeno

Links:
SWOT Report, The State of the World's Sea Turtles
As a Threatened Species, NSW
Conservation Status, gov.au
Tagging (attaching huge radio transmitters on their backs) to hopefully go beyond the gathering of hard 'census' data.
How NOT to eat turtle as a bycatch/bykill
Boat strike and entanglement, Queensland.gov.au.

Updates:
- In the name of conservation, 'hard data' has to be gathered on the species to be protected. Previously animals had to be cut up, stuffed and staged in dusty museums. The mode of the day is to tag them or 'observe them in captivity'. So it is that the 100 million years survivor, potentially making it to the size of a small car is serving science today. The leatherback is being kept for 2 years in captivity with a rubber harness to "generated new information crucial for the conservation of the critically endangered species." On the human-wildlife interface, it is only the 'wild-life' that serves as object to be managed. The anthropogenic values and impacts are not on the agenda. The human can continue to roam and erase the other species unhindered in their habitat. A 'blind spot' of 'science' ?
Howard, Peter, The Beast Within: An Exploration of Australian Constructions of Wildlife, Griffith University, 2007
Soft Rubber Harness Enables Researchers To Study Leatherback Turtles In Captivity For Years. University of British Columbia (2008, November 1) ScienceDaily.

17.10.08

Shooting Endangered Eagles

Shooting endangered birds on South Australia's west coast:
"Two white-bellied sea eagles and a juvenile coastal raptor have been found with bullet wounds near Searcy Bay, Ceduna and Port Fowler in the past three weeks. In the case of the white-bellied sea eagle, we know that there are only about 50 breeding pairs left in South Australia so they're a very endangered species" abc 171008
Image: C. Spitzweg, Shooter of Eagles, 1875 via Zeno

Update: Birds of prey killed illegally in Scotland: 69 in 2007. "Of these, 37 were confirmed as pesticide or poison abuse killing or threatening raptors...Carbofuran, an agricultural pesticide which has been banned since December 2001, was used in 30 out of the 37 confirmed cases. There were also 78 reports of other types of persecution, such as nest destruction, traps and shooting incidents, down on 85 in 2006." BBC 1108
- Ingestion of Spent Lead Ammunition:Implications for Wildlife and Humans, 2008 ( of blinded eagles starving due to lead)

8.10.08

Water and Desalination Factories by M. Barlow

Maude Barlow speaking about water and desalination plants in May 2008.
"Desalination plants will ring the world's oceans, many of them run by nuclear power; corporate nanotechnology will clean up sewage water and sell it to private utilities who will sell it back to us at a huge profit; the rich will drink only bottled water found in the few remote parts of the world left or sucked from the clouds by machines, while the poor die in increasing numbers. This is not science fiction. This is where the world is headed unless we change course."
Her book Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Fight for the Right to Water – (October 16, 2007) is a very readable and an informative insight on the expropriation of water. From water as a right to water only to be delivered in the commodity form for those who can pay.
There are also more videos of her talks
- Door Wide Open for Private Investment in the Water Industry, Department of Water and Energy, NSW gov. au, 080808

4.10.08

'World Animal Day' - Facing the Animal within

Is is "world animal day" today. One day to "To celebrate humankind’s relationship with the animal kingdom". The WAD is out there visualising what 'animals' means, namely dogs. In Sydney it is spelled out as: "...dogs, cats, ferrets, birds and mice" which are to be brought by pet owners to be given a blessing. Animals requiring their own habitat seem to be excluded. Only 'pets', degenerated lineages, richly bestowed with resources are to be 'blessed'.
The rest, not at our command, are pushed off the degraded planet. Mostly robbed of a habitat and resources, 'wild'-life is being made extinct by our actions on this planet.

Tolerated 'wild-life' in captivity, generating revenues, is frequently violated by young human beings. In the latest case, a seven-year-old boy illegally entered a N.T. zoo, " bludgeoned some of the animals to death with stones and hurled others over the two fences surrounding the crocodile enclosure...A turtle, four Western blue-tongued lizards, two bearded dragons, two thorny devil lizards and the zoo's 20-year-old goanna were among those killed....The fact a seven-year-old can wreak so much havoc in such a short time, it's unbelievable," said the zoo director. They are looking at suing the parents.

Going wild in the wild
Many formally protected native animals get violated in their remaining fragmented habitat. Just some of the recent hate crimes:

The Koala
Kangaroos
Birds

These are just a few examples of hate crimes committed by individuals/ groups against iconic and 'protected' creatures of Australia. There is also the systemic culling, shooting, sterilising, poisoning (baiting) etc of wild-life as a form of 'management'. It is a mystery why Australians seem to have so much hate for their iconic native animals and pamper foreign animals. But often, they too get sadistically abused, dogs get burnt, horses raced to death.
Cruelty against pets is also right up. "Animal cruelty by children is correlated with exposure to domestic violence". Working on the mental health of young human beings prevents not only cruelty against pets and Australian animals, but also is a good strategy to prevent violence between human beings.

Still, the ever expanding sprawl of industrialised human society is pushing the animal kingdom off the planet. Animals that are commercialisable or are obedient to our whimsical wills may stay for a while longer. The next round is for humankind’s relationship with the animal within themselves and others.

Images:
1. Bruegel d. Ä., Jan: Paradise 1620, via Zeno
2. Haeckel, Ernst: Plate 79: Lacertilia. Lizards via Zeno
3. Blake, William,1819, Tate Gallery,via Zeno

Links:
World Conservation Union
The Encyclopedia of Life

The Writings of St. Francis of Assisi

Updates:
- Almost one in four mammals are at risk of disappearing forever, according to the latest comprehensive assessment. IUCN 061008
- "Australia a key culprit. One in five Australian mammal species is in danger of dying out, the highest proportion of any developed country, the global survey of more than 44,000 animal and plant species found." SMH 061008

- "We've seen over 30 extinctions in Queensland since records were kept, we've got 151 endangered plants, 51 endangered animals, we've got 220 endangered regional ecosystems, so Queensland has really got to get going to stop a tidal wave of extinctions.They'll go extinct on massive scales, many times above the natural level of extinction...The current rates of extinction that are caused by people are 20 or more times the natural rate of extinction." abc 071008
- Dolphins are being lured with fish, then attacked by local youths in Whyalla in South Australia. The dolphins were tame because of human feeding. Youths dropped rocks on the marine mammals. abc 151008
- A killed platypus, an endangered lungfish and other fish were found dead in an illegal net...along Obi Obi Creek near Kenilworth. Maroochidore.The EPA is calling on the public for help. abc 171008

- "Sickening" attacks on endangered birds on South Australia's west coast:
"Two white-bellied sea eagles and a juvenile coastal raptor have been found with bullet wounds near Searcy Bay, Ceduna and Port Fowler in the past three weeks. In the case of the white-bellied sea eagle, we know that there are only about 50 breeding pairs left in South Australia so they're a very endangered species " abc 171008
- An 80 years old, blind flamingo in a zoo has been bashed by a 17 yo ,18 yo and 19 yo persons in the middle of the day. The animal is in a critical condition.
Adelaide. Do we need to cage animals to protect them from human beings ? abc 301008 >The flamingo has survived, but is so traumatised that all food is refused. The Adelaide Zoo is considering higher fences to protect the animals from violent human beings. abc 021108

3.10.08

Pelican Shooting in a Coastal Wildlife Reserve

A pelican, a protected Australian species (Pelecanus conspicillatus) has been shot by 'hunters' in the Shoal Bay Coastal Reserve in the Northern Territory. In another catchment reserve another ' hunter' has been fined $ 330 as he was caught with a lead shot. About the effects of this heavy metal on birds and the environment Folly has reported before. Elsewhere Albatrosses and Pelicans are dying from human caused eutrophication.
Via abc 021008
Image: altered, Brockhaus image, via Zeno
Videos: Pelicans

27.7.08

The Black Swan Culling Fabel


90 Black swans (Cygnus atratus) are to be shot on the edge of a protected wetland. Caught out in the middle of their breeding season, they are starving as the lakes have dried up. On the edge of their international protected refuge humans engage in “overstocking, over-grazing (and) the growth of rabbit populations, “. Forced to leave their 'dead wetland' these birds moved in on" some non-native greens. As some of ”the swans had trespassed onto a farmer's land adjacent to the Ramsar-listed wetland” they were declared a “pest” by authorities and permits were issued to shoot the protected Australian waterfowl.

East Gippsland in Victoria, Australia is where the forces of drought, severe floods and fires have for a long time stemmed the tide of irrigated dryland 'agriculture'. The “vulnerability” of human habitation, 'land management as usual ',mining and aqua-factories are on the cards. 'Pastoralists' and graziers seem to display a natural allergy against the conservation of public wetlands as a threat to their rights/territory.

The indigenous mythologies link black swans with their territory, the wetland, human practices and sustainable land-use strategies. Progressive encroachment on Aboriginal land and habitats of native wildlife followed. Accounts of 'vandalising the swans in the 'swamps', stealing eggs during their non-flying moulting season exist from 1882. Gould reported of whaling ships filled with black swans. Settlers and swans appeared already then as incompatible.

A culture of culling entrenched itself on the southern continent. Native fauna was extracted from the land and water to divert these resources to introduced and often costly run-away fauna. Struggling to extract a European-like life-style out of the driest continent on Earth, which by then was undermined by their feral hopping rabbits, land erosion and sandstorms. A scapegoat had to be sacrificed in 1932 when farmers called in the army against starving emus in WA. 20,000 emus were gunned down by machine guns. Dingoes and kangaroos are being 'culled' today not to restore a non-existing agricultural paradigm, but to conquer habitat for human beings (and their dogs) exclusively.

Today the culling go-ahead is issued to get Dingoes out of national parks and kangaroos out of the edge of towns. All space and resources have to become usable only by humans and their best friends. The flags and heraldry appear like mockery, boasting with unique Australian animals, such as the black swans, emus and kangaroos. The birds in the backyard are long gone, the backyard too.

Should there be any survivors, the shooting of waterfowl (and other creatures) is a popular 'sport', this time by civilians. The severe drought, caused by self-inflicted climate change does at the moment not permit any massacres of birds. But the freedom of exemption is liberally taken in 'nature'. Both forms of 'recreational' killing of waterfowl and fish socialise large amounts of toxic lead into the water bodies and ecosystems. Waterbirds, if not mutilated or shot, suffer from the toxic lead run-off. The human community receives their dose later as it is dependent on the health of well managed wetlands. Some Victorian lakes receive up to 138 kg of lead p.a., a shooting range in the US gets contaminated with more” than 80,000 tons of lead shot and bullets each year.”

Australian protected wetlands are too often utilised for purposes other than conservation of a biome. Dogs are allowed to roam and stress the waterfowl. Vehicles, boats and aircraft leave their pollution. (pdf) Energy intensive vehicles share the habitat of waterbirds generously, whether their owners are willing to share water or any other resource with 'wildlife' is another. Habitat destruction, “environmental mismanagement” and climate-induced drought is a challenge for Australian wetlands and their flora and fauna. "This is the beginning of the end for the lakes, but going out and slaughtering the wildlife is not the solution."

Images:
1. "Mulgo" (Black swan) by Port Jackson Painter, uploaded via Wikipedia
2.
Image from Brockhaus' Kleines Konversations-Lexikon, via Zeno
3.
Image from Brehm's Life of Animals. via
Zeno

Rich Media:
Videos of Black Swans on IBC
Videos & info, Victoria - the place to be
Audio of Black swans, Birdguides

Links:
- Johne's disease,(Mycobacterium paratuberculosis) a serious wasting disease of introduced animals.
- Habitat Network East Gippsland
- 30 protected black swans (image!) and 35,000 ducks were shot as part of 'recreation' in Tasmania in 2006 abc.net, 30.11.07

Update 280708:
- United Nations University (2008, July 27). Rising Energy, Food Prices Major Threats To Wetlands As Farmers Eye New Areas For Crops. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 28, 2008
- Ingestion of Spent Lead Ammunition:Implications for Wildlife and Humans, 2008 ( of blinded eagles from lead, starving)