Thu 8 Nov
2018 04.09 GMTLast modified on Thu 8 Nov 2018 04.18 GMT
Dozens of Australia’s
top scientists are demanding the New South
Wales government repeal legislation that abandoned the culling
of feral horses in the Kosciuszko national park.
In Canberra
on Thursday 145 scientists met to hear evidence of the damage feral horses are
causing to the park, the worst of which includes the destruction of nesting
habitat of critically endangered corroboree frogs.
An accord to
be presented to the Berejiklian government calls on NSW to acknowledge “the
extensive, serious, and potentially irreparable damage” the horses are causing
and to cooperate
with governments in Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory to
remove them using aerial culling.
It says the
government must “repeal in its entirety the NSW Kosciuszko Wild Horse Heritage
Act 2018, and restore the protected status of Kosciuszko national park, its
2006 plan of management and implement the 2008 horse management plan”.
Jamie
Pittock, an associate professor at the Australian National University Fenner
school of environment and society, said the government had walked way from
decades of cooperation between the science community and governments to protect
the national park.
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