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Australian govt urged to save koalas from extinction

Australian former environment minister Greg Hunt in 2015 authorized a recovery plan for koalas which is now two years overdue. The recently proposed recovery plans serve to maximise the long-term survival of Australian wildlife and come with a three-year deadline to implement and fund.

Koala
Koala

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Published : Jun 22, 2020, 12:57 PM IST

Canberra:Australian ecologists have called on the federal government to urgently produce a threatened species recovery plan for the koala populations.

On Tuesday, Kara Youngentob, an ecologist from the Australian National University (ANU), said that a recovery plan for the marsupials should be a priority, with habitat loss from forestry operations exacerbated by the '2019-20 Black Summer' bushfire crisis.

Recovery plans serve to maximise the long-term survival of Australian wildlife and come with a three-year deadline to implement and fund.

Former environment minister Greg Hunt in 2015 authorized a recovery plan for koalas which is now two years overdue.

Youngentob told Nine Entertainment newspapers that only one species of tree was growing back to dominate areas affected by logging and bushfires, creating food deserts for koalas.

Read |Ecologists used regeneration to reduce bushfire risk

"Their populations are like little lights and they will continue to blink out across their habitat range until it's dark," she said.

"The current protections in place aren't enough to ensure populations don't continue to decline. There have been localised extinctions and they may continue."

James Trezise, a policy analyst from the Australian Conservation Foundation, said that koalas were smashed by last summer's bushfires.

Read |Powerful storm cause flash flooding, power outages in Australia

An estimated 25,000 koalas perished in the bushfires on Kangaroo Island off the coast of South Australia, approximately half of the island's population.

A further 10,000 died in New South Wales, one-third of the state's population.

"This is an iconic species that people hold dear and it's invaluable to Australia's culture and also to the tourism industry," Trezise said.

(IANS)

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