Following
the release of data showing that the State Government has only trained
three (3) dogs to detect koalas and none were being deployed in State
Forests, Greens MP Dawn Walker has called for koala sniffer dogs to be
widely used in pre-logging surveys to better protect NSW’s declining
koala populations from destructive logging.
“This
is a Government that has an appalling record when it comes to
protecting our koalas with their own reports stating that koalas in NSW
have declined
by more than 25% in the past 15 to 20 years.
“What’s
worrying is that ecologists consistently tell me how Forestry
Corporation is failing to identify or even properly search for koalas
and their
high-use habitat before they commence logging operations.
“We
believe that the deployment of koala-trained sniffer dogs in our State
Forests will be a much more reliable and accurate way to detect koalas
and
their core habitat, than the current method that requires loggers to
manually search through dense leaf litter looking for koala scats.
“This
is a Government that is trying to weaken the already poorly-implemented
methods Forestry Corporation use to identify koalas and their habitat,
such as through scat searches.
“It’s
time they started to take koala conservation seriously and in the very
least, commit to independent trials of koala sniffer dogs as part of
pre-logging
surveys with the view to expanding them across the State” said Dawn
Walker MP.
In
2013, a trial using the world’s first koala sniffer dog, Oscar to
identify koala populations in Royal Camp State Forest resulted in
multiple detections
of koalas and the development of forestry operation plans that excluded
Koala High Use areas from logging.
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