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Last Updated : 2024-04-26 16:02:00
More than 10,000 camels will be shot by professional firearm experts from helicopters to prevent them from drinking too much water in drought-afflicted South Australia.
The shooters were said to begin the cull yesterday following an order from aboriginal leaders in the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) lands.
Locals have complained that the animals have been entering communities and wreaking havoc as they look for any available water source including taps and tanks.
“We have been stuck in stinking hot and uncomfortable conditions, feeling unwell, because the camels are coming in and knocking down fences, getting in around the houses and trying to get to water through air-conditioners,’’ Marita Baker, a board member of the APY executive told The Australian.
The animals are also being culled over concerns about greenhouse gas emissions as they emit methane equivalent to one ton of carbon dioxide per year, the paper reported. “This has resulted in significant damage to infrastructure, danger to families and communities, increased grazing pressure across the APY lands and critical animal welfare issues as some camels die of thirst or trample each other to access water,” the spokesperson told news.com.au.
“In some cases, dead animals have contaminated important water sources and cultural sites.”
The operation to control the camel population, estimated to total 1.2 million across the country, is expected to take five days. Their carcasses will be left to dry off before they are burned or buried, ABC News reported.
Camels were introduced to Australia from India and Afghanistan during the 19th century and were used for transport and construction. If culling did not take place, the camel population would double every eight to 10 years. The operation comes amid estimates that more than a billion animals have died in the wildfires which have been raging across Australia.
Chris Dickman, an ecologist at the University of Sydney, told HuffPost earlier estimates that nearly half a billion creatures had perished were conservative because they did not include animals such as bats, frogs and invertebrates.
Including those, he said, it was “without any doubt at all” that the losses exceeded one billion, which he also called “a very conservative figure.”
Conservationists and wildlife experts fear bushfires may have wiped out entire species of animals.
Populations of small marsupials called dunnarts, along with glossy black cockatoos, may have disappeared entirely after fires burned a third of Kangaroo Island, which has been left a “scorched wasteland.” (Independent)
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