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85lc
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Reged: 19/01/18
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40,000 DEER CULLED AS SOUTH AUSTRALIA IMPLEMENTS ERADICATION
      #378707 - 17/08/23 10:40 PM

Culling game animals is a very poor game management program. Unfortunateley that also happens sometimes in the US though not to this extent.

https://www.themeateater.com/conservatio...utm_source=sfmc

40,000 Deer Culled as South Australia Implements Eradication Plan by Lakhan Clark Aug 10, 2023

Australia isn’t exactly known for its deer, but the continent is home to over one million, with over six different species. Historically, their management was entrusted to landowners and hunters, but a South Australian (SA) government decision to eliminate all introduced species has changed the game. Rather than responsible management, they’ve turned to complete eradication. Whilst most Americans will never be affected by this cull, it’s a clear example of what not to do with our game populations, introduced, invasive, or otherwise.

A Plan of Eradication

Australia is comprised of seven separate states, each governed by its own management body, much like the US system. Often, each government makes its own decisions regarding the management of the wildlife under its jurisdiction. In past years, introduced ungulates like wild deer on private land were under the management of the landowners, with each taking steps to harvest appropriate numbers of animals to keep populations in check.

All of this changed with the introduction of the Landscape South Australia Act 2019, which gave the South Australian Landscape Board virtually unlimited powers to eradicate introduced species across both public and private land, with red, fallow, sambar, rusa, chital, and hog deer lumped together on this list. This act gives the landscape board power to order landowners to eradicate all deer from their property within 14 days of being given notice by the state, whether they want them there or not. If the landowner doesn’t comply, there liable for up to a $25,000 fine.

And if they don’t comply, the landscape board can send helicopters onto private property at any time to cull the deer themselves. And if the landscape board does cull all the deer off a property, they have the ability to legally charge the landowner the entire bill. These government helicopters use thermal imaging to track deer and shoot them with buckshot, leaving a landscape covered in lead-riddled carcasses.

Why the Change in Management?
This radical change in management is part of the SA Government’s goal to eradicate all deer. Currently, the state has around 40,000 deer, but they worry that number could increase to 200,000 in 10 years. And that fear is something to take seriously, as overpopulated deer in Australia can contribute to the degeneration of grassland and forest ecosystems, in combination with livestock numbers, kangaroo populations, and forest management. It can also cost landowners, due to competition with livestock. For them, the simplest option is to simply eradicate all deer, no matter the cost to taxpayers, landowners, and the animals themselves.

But the reasons behind growing deer numbers are more complicated. South Australia doesn’t have game agencies responsible for managing wildlife on a landscape level, so the responsibility of management instead fell upon landowners. In most cases, they’ve managed deer responsibly, using recreational hunters to keep deer numbers at appropriate levels, balanced with livestock and native wildlife. Red and fallow deer populations can increase by up to 34% per year, but allowing year-round hunting of does and fawns mitigates this growth, giving adequate hunter access. Such management has grown a thriving recreational hunting industry, both for subsistence hunters filling their freezers, and for trophy hunters chasing mature stags in the fall.

Problems begin to arise when those landowners aren’t so responsible. Some refuse to let recreational hunters onto their property, only harvest stags and bucks, or purposely release deer into areas where they’ve never been to increase hunter opportunity. All of this undermines the efforts of responsible landowners, especially when the growing herds then spread onto other properties.

To further complicated the situation, the SA government’s historical decision to not allow hunting on public land effectively turned national parks and forests into deer sanctuaries. Even with government culls, those public land herds then act as source populations for neighboring private properties. It’s a chain reaction that’s hard to curtail, but that doesn’t mean the only option should be eradication.

Destroying a Culture of Self-Sufficiency
The greatest misjudgment of this whole situation is that deer have no value. For hunters and landowners, this couldn’t be further from the truth.

Nick Rositano told MeatEater about an instance where his rut hunt was disrupted by helicopter cullers. “At around 5:30 that morning, we were out looking for deer when we heard a faint motor in the distance, getting closer and closer until we looked up and saw two helicopters circling nearby. On this property neighboring a local national park, we counted approximately 150 to 200 shots in around 20 to 30 minutes, with choppers flying low and massacring any deer that gave them a chance. It’s a grim glimpse into the future of deer hunting over here in SA for the next generation.”

Jake Nicholson, another local hunter, has also witnessed the impacts of culling. “It’s devastating to see deer being eradicated on this scale. After working with landowners for years to manage these herds, they’re all just being exterminated. It’s an irreplaceable way of feeding our families and enjoying the outdoors, and the shortsightedness of the current government is destroying this in the blink of an eye. The stress of seeing our hard work flushed down the drain is a sorry sight to see”.

The value is far from just intangible as well. A single fallow deer can yield around 45 to 90 pounds of meat, and with organic ground beef being AUD 25/kg, each animal is worth at least $500 to 1,000, and far more if it’s a red or sambar deer. A large red stag could yield up to 200 pounds of useable meat—enough to feed a family for months.

Extrapolated out across the state’s 40,000 deer, a 35% annual harvest would produce at least 420 metric tonnes of meat valued at over $10 million. That’s nearly 3 times the $4.3 million the South Australian government plans on spending on deer culling in the next 4 years, and it excludes the value of hides, antlers, and guided hunts for these animals as well, which collectively contributes 2.4 billion to the national economy.

An Unethical Eradication
Aside from the material destruction, the method of eradication utilized by the South Australian Government can be cruel. Cullers use buckshot shotguns from close range, flying over the top of the running deer. Ethically harvesting just a single animal in this way is an incredibly difficult task, let alone if you’re required to shoot over 50 animals in an hour to meet eradication quotas.

Research indicates that helicopter-based shooting more often than not requires deer to be shot two to five times per animal even when following strict guidelines, with a significant risk of non-fatal wounding, up to 14% in some instances. This is in stark contrast to harvesting a deer with a rifle or bow, where the hunter focuses on taking one animal at a time and is focused more on an ethical kill than the number of animals they must eradicate.

The residual carcasses and lead pellets also cause problems of their own. The carcasses quickly become a bounty of food for non-native predators like red foxes and feral cats, two invasive species far more destructive than deer, and for livestock-eating wild dogs. And whilst many native scavengers like the giant wedge-tailed Eagle also benefit from the carcasses, the presence of that many led pellets could turn this free meal into a painful death.

Finding Better Ways to Manage Deer
The correct course of management for any overpopulated species is far from an easy decision. Each should come after first considering the variable objectives of landowners, the hunters that live off these animals, and their impact on the wider ecosystem. The SA deer eradication program has been anything but that. Instead, it represents a “waste of natural resources, and waste of taxpayer dollars funding the operation” according to Nick Rositano.

Whilst the future looks bleak for SA deer herds, other states across Australia can set a better example. Instead of eradication, coordination with land managers and recreational hunters should be used to better harvest existing deer herds and prevent new ones from popping up. Creating a system similar to the North American model, where hunters fund wildlife conservation, would allow carcasses to be utilized, herds to be consistently managed, and unknowledgeable landowners to be educated on the process of responsible deer management. It’s a lesson that American hunters can also apply to introduced species, as we learn to manage them.

--------------------
RB


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: 40,000 DEER CULLED AS SOUTH AUSTRALIA IMPLEMENTS ERADICATION [Re: 85lc]
      #378709 - 17/08/23 11:59 PM

Yes complete bastards. Anti hunting, anti gun. Helicopter massacring instead. They won't get them all by far. Many will survive, pockets etc. It will cost untold millions.

Quote:

All of this changed with the introduction of the Landscape South Australia Act 2019, which gave the South Australian Landscape Board virtually unlimited powers to eradicate introduced species across both public and private land, with red, fallow, sambar, rusa, chital, and hog deer lumped together on this list. This act gives the landscape board power to order landowners to eradicate all deer from their property within 14 days of being given notice by the state, whether they want them there or not. If the landowner doesn’t comply, there liable for up to a $25,000 fine.
.
And if they don’t comply, the landscape board can send helicopters onto private property at any time to cull the deer themselves. And if the landscape board does cull all the deer off a property, they have the ability to legally charge the landowner the entire bill.




Complete arsehole socialists.

The "evil" private landowner, Marxist govt planning to bankrupt land owners.

Controlled deer are a resource. Wasted to rot. I don't expect a peep of protest from the Greenies and animal rights bastards.

I'm guessing these sorts voted it through in the state Parliament Upper House / Legislative Council. Labor, Greens, SA Best, AR etc.

Not completely part of it, but the attitude is certainly part of it. UN2030, the GREAT RESET, 30% of prime agricultural land redirected to the "environment", no private land ownership, serfdom.

Imagine getting a 14 day notice to remove wild deer from a 3000 acre grazing property, mixed bush and fields. Then being hit with a fee of hundreds of thousands of dollars for an inefficient chopper shooting a few deer.

Culls in the past cost thousands of dollars per feral beast.

They trialed the heat seeking technology on feral goats and pigs on Kangaroo Island, before and after the bushfires. After the bushfires to exterminate 5he few feral pigs and goats left.

Now going to use it on mainland deer.

The attitude here is PROTECT 100% native animals. EXTERMINATE 100% all introduced animals.

The article can't crow about other states. This is a centrist plan. I read a post online where an organisation was complaining about facical consultation regarding feral animals and hunting. Either in NSW,or National.

For people not liking to talk about politics, the world's going to shit. And only going to get worse in the next few years.

Depressing existence. Un-natural existence.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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93x64mm
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Reged: 07/12/11
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Re: 40,000 DEER CULLED AS SOUTH AUSTRALIA IMPLEMENTS ERADICATION [Re: NitroX]
      #378712 - 18/08/23 06:20 AM

Your quote John of "I don't expect a peep of protest from the Greenies and animal rights bastards"
is spot on. These twits will try & quietly get this thru so that they look like they're doing something for the community - more the other way, a complete waste of natural recourses.


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Hunter4752001
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Reged: 25/01/10
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Re: 40,000 DEER CULLED AS SOUTH AUSTRALIA IMPLEMENTS ERADICATION [Re: 93x64mm]
      #378716 - 18/08/23 09:47 AM

Do any of our South Australian members know if there is any truth to the article? Every attempt I've seen to eliminate deer, including using helicopters and thermal imaging, has been a costly failure resulting in overall minimal impact in deer population numbers. The idea you can suddenly cull 40,000 deer just doesn't seem practical. It certainly hasn't worked in the east coast highland forests.

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NitroXAdministrator
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Reged: 25/12/02
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Re: 40,000 DEER CULLED AS SOUTH AUSTRALIA IMPLEMENTS ERADICATION [Re: Hunter4752001]
      #378729 - 18/08/23 08:21 PM

The thermal imaging chopper gunships thing in SA is not new. They tried it on Kangaroo Island to eliminate feral goats. They reportedly used "Judas goats" to find herds as well.

After the bushfires on two thirds of the island, the western end, many feral pigs died. Reportedly they used thermal imaging and chopper gunships to reportedly exterminate the remaining feral pigs. I say reportedly as one needs to question everything in the media. I'm sure goats and especially pigs survived. The KI pigs are unique, near wild boar, sort of, after a couple hundred years. Introduced by whalers and sealers as shipwreck food. Clean and free of diseases usually infecting inland feral pigs. I'd like a few pigs to put in a paddock. And of course wild pork in a freezer.

Deer extermination, true? I will have a look. But there is nothing unexpected from the SA govt. The Liberal opposition. leader here is also a wanker. He tried to shut down the quail season when environment minister.

Effective, won't be 100%. But SA deer range is not like the Great Dividing Range. More open forest and scrub. Lower hills . Flatter country. Thermal imaging chopper gunships will work better.

Other than the loss of hunting animals and a huge waste of a resource, instead of a proactive managed sustainable approach, it's exterminate! exterminate! exterminate!

The "40,000 will soon become 200,000" is total BS, and an invasive species council scare/panic campaign.

The forcible billing of landowners for their ridiculous expensive chopper gunships is the act of a tyrannical UN2030 Globalist government.



--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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NitroXAdministrator
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Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 39877
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
Re: 40,000 DEER CULLED AS SOUTH AUSTRALIA IMPLEMENTS ERADICATION [Re: NitroX]
      #378730 - 18/08/23 08:50 PM

https://pir.sa.gov.au/biosecurity/introd...ication_program

South Australian Feral Deer Eradication Program
Landholders are responsible for culling feral deer on their properties under the Landscape South Australia Act 2019.

South Australia is undertaking an eradication program to assist landholders and to eliminate the impacts feral deer have on primary industries, the environment and public safety.

There are about 40,000 feral deer in South Australia, with populations abundant in:

the Limestone Coast Landscape Board region
the Hills and Fleurieu Landscape Board region.
We aim to eradicate feral deer by 2032. At least 34 percent of the population of fallow deer must be culled each year to avoid population increase.

Learn more in the Feral Deer Economic Analysis (PDF 1.3 MB (PDF 1.3 MB) prepared by BDO Econsearch.

Detecting feral deer
The program uses military-grade thermal imaging to cull feral deer in paddocks and in densely vegetated environments. This equipment takes advantage of the heat signature of feral deer to detect them.

See the thermal imagery in action:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=F8tVjZ8SBFo


Program standards
The program operates under the Code of Practice (COP) and Standard Operating Procedures (SOP).

These revised national standards were informed by research on the use of thermal imaging equipment and shotguns to cull deer:

Cost-effective management of wild deer – Centre for Invasive Species Solutions
Aerial culling feral fallow deer with shotguns – Flinders University (PDF 4.6 MB).
Partnerships
The program is implemented in partnership with:

the Australian Government
regional landscape boards
the Department for Environment and Water
primary production industries.
Contact
Biosecurity SA – Invasive Species Unit
Phone:
Email: PIRSA.InvasiveSpecies etc


Quote:

" to assist landholders"




Yeah right.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


Edited by NitroX (18/08/23 08:59 PM)


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