stry wrote:Also a bit difficult for a cull to be permanent - unless ALL the animals are regarded as "surplus"
highercountry wrote:Giddy_up wrote:It can't be that quick and clean, charges were brought agains the NPWS by the RSPCA in relation to Guy Fawkes. Only reason they didn't go further was the fact that there was a plea bargain by NPWS.
Charges were laid under intense political pressure applied to the RSPCA in response to a whipped up media frenzy.
The cull was, none the less, approved by the RSPCA in the first place...
Giddy_up wrote:If the horses are removed permanently via a cull and the numbers that people believe are correct, it will see 40,000 animals shot...
maddog wrote:Giddy_up wrote:If the horses are removed permanently via a cull and the numbers that people believe are correct, it will see 40,000 animals shot...
The numbers being bandied around here are fanciful Giddy. You would be better sticking with your original scepticism in this regard.
The population of wild horses in KNP seems to fluctuate wildly depending on the survey. However it has been estimated as follows: (i) in 2002 at 3000 (NPWS); (ii) in 2005 at 1700 (Drying); (iii) in 2005 at 5200 (Dawson) and (iv) in 2009 at 7000 (NPWS).
Dawson & Hone (2012) estimated the annual rate of increase in the population of brumbies, at three sites they considered representative of KNP, at 1.03, 1.07 and 1.09. Averaging these three and we get an annual rate of increase of 1.063.
Applying this average annual rate of increase to each of the estimates above we arrive at a 2014 population of: (i) 6,245; (ii) 2,946; (iii) 9,012 or (iv) 9,501 respectively. That is, by taking each of the population estimates from the four surveys and applying the average annual growth rate to each, we have a brumby numbers in the KNP at between 2,946 and 9,501. Even if we applied the maximum population growth (1.09) to the largest surveyed population (7000) we would only have 10,770 brumbies. We are a long way from davidmoor's 28,905 and even further from the 40,000 postulated.
No wonder the locals are scratching their heads in bewilderment.
Giddy_up wrote:I don't believe the numbers are correct maddog. I know what 40,000 animals looks like. Its the population of a Wagga Wagga or similar scattered over an area 50km x 35km because we are only talking about KNP remember. To put this in further context, place 40,000 bushwalkers in the same area and tell them to find a tent site where they can't see one another, they would not be able, but this is how many horses are supposed to be up there?
climberman wrote:Giddy_up wrote:I don't believe the numbers are correct maddog. I know what 40,000 animals looks like. Its the population of a Wagga Wagga or similar scattered over an area 50km x 35km because we are only talking about KNP remember. To put this in further context, place 40,000 bushwalkers in the same area and tell them to find a tent site where they can't see one another, they would not be able, but this is how many horses are supposed to be up there?
I think the park is over three times bigger than you intimate (it's just under 7,000 sq km).
Giddy_up wrote:I would be happy if the Director General of NPWS would come out and say, "no animal will suffer or be in pain and all animals will be dispatched with a one shot kill during this cull and I am personally responsible along with the Minister and all parks staff whom have been involved in the planning of this if the animal welfare standards are not met". You could clear the goal cells out now, as no marksman can kill 40,000 animals with one shot kills from a helicopter and any thing less than this assurance will not meet the greater publics expectations on animal welfare.
It has been said that culling happens elsewhere in Australia on horses and camels etc....but have a look at the terrain that those types of techniques are being used in. Large flat treeless plains with localised water sources and ample room for a marksman to take aim and provide a clean kill, but I would also be prepared to wager that more than one bullet is used per animal. Now cast your mind to the National Park in question and ask yourself, how could they implement this, in this landscape?
On a personal note, I think all the horses and other pests should be removed from National Parks, just not with a gun in this case.
Hallu wrote:A pragmatic way to think about this is to realize that it is man who brought those horses here. They should not exist. It is up to man to correct his mistake and cull them. I am more annoyed by the waste it's gonna be, as these horses could be used in farms or as riding horses or as meat and other products, but it's too expensive.
maddog wrote:Huge numbers and rapid growth population growth would suggest few viable options other than aerial culling. But given that both the number and the growth of the population is much lower than previously suggested, it is obvious that there is no 'brumby emergency'. If there is no emergency we have options. The two most obvious are an expanded brumby running program and fertility control measures.
One problem we have seen with the current brumby extraction process is that there is not a sufficiently large market to ensure most (if not all) of these animals find homes. I agree it is cruel to capture a wild animal just to deliver it to the knackery, but it is also cruel to slaughter them from the air. However if restrictions were placed on the private sale of horses, and horse owners who were not registered breeders with a unique produce (e.g. racehorses) were required to sterilize their animals, by restricting supply we may see an increase in demand for the brumbies.
In addition a levy could be placed on all horse sales in Australia, including the imposition of an import / export tax on racehorses. Nor is there any good reason why all horse related industries (stables, TAB, etc.) should not pay a ‘brumby tax’ on all moneys exchanged. That way the horse industry and brumby lovers could incur the cost of an brumby fertility control program, the rehabilitation of landscapes (if necessary), and the costs associated with setting up new brumby reserves for animals that failed to find owners. A 'win-win' situation
climberman wrote:Hallu wrote:A pragmatic way to think about this is to realize that it is man who brought those horses here. They should not exist. It is up to man to correct his mistake and cull them. I am more annoyed by the waste it's gonna be, as these horses could be used in farms or as riding horses or as meat and other products, but it's too expensive.
NPWS can't give away the ones they now capture via trapping. Who is capable of taking ~400 to 1000 horses every year? They are expensive to keep. A very large percentage of trapped horses still end up in the knackery, so same outcome as aerial cull except they have to go through the (I imagine) soemwhat unpleasant experience of being trapped and transported (eventually to a knackery). Unless you have a concern about the desperate need for more horses in pet meat?
Hallu wrote:Well my view is that culling is necessary, should be done right now, and that posponing culling for the vague hope of a couple of captures and adoptions is ridiculous.
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