Aus plans to cull 400 kangaroos
2008-05-16 20:53
Canberra - Defence authorities outraged animal rights campaigners on Friday by reviving plans to kill 400 kangaroos that are causing environmental damage on the outskirts of Australia's capital.
The Defence Department abandoned the cull plan in March in the face of an international outcry and decided to truck the kangaroos from the abandoned military site in suburban Canberra to remote forest land.
But defence spokesperson Brigadier Andrew Nikolic said on Friday that transporting the marsupials was too expensive at A$3.5m - or A$8 750 per animal.
"Defence therefore has no option but to undertake a cull," Nikolic said.
The issue has split Australians over the merits of killing their beloved national symbol to protect rare lizards and insects that share their grassy habitat.
Wildlife Protection Association of Australia president Pat O'Brien said he and scores of other protesters were determined to prevent contractors from killing any kangaroos among the 600 that are overgrazing on rare native grassland.
"We're absolutely disgusted by what's happening and we'll be in there to protect the kangaroos if there's any attempt to kill them," said O'Brien, whose association's patrons are the family of the late "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin.
Destroying habitat
Nikolic said the cull will begin within weeks but did not specify exactly when.
Because of the suburban environment, the use of firearms would be too risky to humans. So contractors plan to use tranquiliser darts to catch the kangaroos, then kill them with lethal injections.
Scientists point out that eastern grey kangaroos are abundant and are destroying the native grassland habitat of threatened species such as the grassland earless dragon, striped legless lizard, golden sun moth and perunga grasshopper.
European settlers built Australia's cattle and sheep industries on grass seed imported from Britain, and native grassland, which is imperative for some species, is now rare. In some parts of Australia, it can only be found in old cemeteries where livestock never grazed.
- AP