Australia’s
isolation for millions of years has produced a bewildering array of endemic
species. More than 80% of our plants, our mammals, our reptiles and our frogs
are found nowhere else in the world. Nearly 50% of our birds are only found in
Australia.
Last year,
42 new species were added to the national Australian threatened species lists. In 2024, 54 species were added, and in 2023, a staggering 144
species were added to our threatened list. It is estimated that, in Australia,
between 1 and 3 species of invertebrates become extinct every
WEEK! Habitat destruction, invasive species and climate change are all
contributors to this country having the highest mammal extinction rate in the
world.
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| Southern Brown Bandicoot - Endangered (F&FG Act & EPBC Act) |
Even the
smallest amount of investigation of the subject will soon convince the
researcher that Australia has a nature crisis. The decline is ongoing and accelerating. Disappointingly, we seem not to care.
The parade
of recent federal Minister’s for the Environment, despite their heartening
election pitches, seem able to achieve little to amend the situation. Environmentalist
and conservation groups such as the Invasive Species Council, the Australian
Land Conservation Alliance, the Australian Conservation Foundation, and the
State and Territory Conservation Councils of Australia, were all highly critical of the recent Labor Government’s
budget announcements.
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| Glen Nayook cool temperate rainforest community - Threatened (F&FG Act) |
Even
Labor’s much vaunted Nature Positive Plan introduced in 2022 by the then
Minister for the Environment and Water, Tanya Plibersek, has recently been
watered down: environmental standards have been diluted; mining and business
interests have successfully blocked the strengthening of the EPA powers; the
use of biodiversity credits for offsetting environmental damage have been altered
and remain highly controversial; and more.
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| Gang-gang Cockatoo - Endangered (F&FG Act & EPBC Act) |
Perhaps
though, we shouldn’t be blaming our politicians – entirely. Recent public
surveys for example found that 20% of respondents believed that foxes were
native to Australia and a straw poll at a barbecue, conducted by a journalist
at The Age, found that no one knew what a Quoll was!
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| Cobra Greenhood - Endangered (F&FG Act) |
And yet, in
March last year, a survey of over 3,000 respondents by the Biodiversity
Council, found that there is, “… a growing concern among
Australians about the state and future of nature”. There seems to be a
dichotomy here.
It appears that successive generations of Australians are losing
touch with our native environment in a form of cultural amnesia. While we
acclaim our gum trees, our kangaroos and emus, we seem to be very unaware of the
harmful processes that are re-shaping our environment.
It’s already too late for some of our special species. Will
we wake up in time to save the remainder?