Disaster Koala listed as endangered after Australian governments fail to halt its decline

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Conservationists hope the endangered listing and proposed Koala recovery plan will serve as a ‘turning point’ to save Australia’s iconic species. Photograph: Mark Evans/Getty Images

The Australian government has officially listed the koala as endangered after a decline in its numbers due to land clearing and catastrophic bushfires shrinking its habitat.

The environment minister, Sussan Ley, accepted the recommendation of the threatened species scientific committee that the koala populations of Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory should have their conservation status upgraded.

The stronger listing under national law is recognition that the koala’s plight has become more urgent and that successive Australian governments have failed to turn the much-loved animal’s circumstances around since it was listed as vulnerable in 2012.

It comes after the Morrison government last month announced $50m to help the species. The funding was welcomed by environment groups but described as a “drop in the ocean” if the root causes of the species’ decline were not addressed.

Ley said in addition to the endangered listing, the government planned to adopt a long-awaited national recovery plan for the koala.

“Today I am increasing the protection for koalas in NSW, the ACT and Queensland, listing them as endangered rather than their previous designation of vulnerable,” Ley said.

“The impact of prolonged drought, followed by the black summer bushfires, and the cumulative impacts of disease, urbanisation and habitat loss over the past twenty years have led to the advice.”

Environment groups have long argued the koala’s conservation status should be upgraded. Three organisations – Humane Society International (HSI), WWF-Australia and the International Fund for Animal Welfare – nominated it for the endangered listing.

“The koala has gone from no listing to now being declared endangered on the Australian east coast within a decade,” said Dermot O’Gorman, WWF-Australia’s chief executive.

“That is a shockingly fast decline for one of the world’s most iconic animals. The endangered status is a grim but important decision by minister Ley.

“There is still time to save this globally iconic species if the uplisting serves as a turning point in koala conservation. We need stronger laws and landholder incentives to protect their forest homes.”

The endangered listing will provide additional protection for koalas because it lowers the threshold at which a development must be assessed under national laws for potentially significant impacts on the species.

The recovery plan sets out the key threats to the koala and actions needed to prevent its extinction.

Such a plan had been identified under national environmental laws as a requirement for the species for the past 10 years but no Australian government had developed one, making it one of almost 200 recovery plans for Australia’s threatened species and habitats that were overdue.

It took the black summer bushfire disaster to prompt consultation on a draft, with a final version delivered to the minister late last year.

Once a recovery plan is adopted, ministers are legally bound not to make decisions that are inconsistent with it, however governments have no obligation to actually implement the plan.

The koala is under pressure from multiple ongoing threats including disease, global heating and clearing of its habitat for development.

In 2020, a NSW parliamentary inquiry found the species would be extinct in that state by 2050 unless governments took urgent action to protect its habitat and turn the declines around.

Alexia Wellbelove, a senior campaign manager at HSI, said Ley’s decision should prompt Australian governments to do more to address the declining state of the country’s environment.

“Although it’s devastating for the koala it’s an important action for their protection,” she said.

“It’s a cue for governments really to take a stand against continued habitat clearing for koalas. We can’t just continue business as usual.”

Wellbelove said the decision needed to be followed by action on the review of national environmental laws by the former competition watchdog head, Graeme Samuel.

Samuel found Australian governments had comprehensively failed in their duty to protect the environment and the country’s iconic wildlife had suffered because of it.

He made 38 recommendations to transform the act, including a proposal for new national environmental standards that require clear outcomes for Australia’s plants and animals.

“Until such time that we have strong national environmental standards that specify no-go areas around critical habitat for species such as the koala, habitat destruction will continue and this must be addressed urgently,” Wellbelove said.

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Koalas are pretty much too stupid to live. They're the Australian equivalent of pandas in terms of self-preservation. The only difference is that koalas are nowhere near as cute enough to garner international attention and millions of dollars funneled their way every year solely dedicated to its preservation over other, more useful (in terms of preserving ecology) species.
 
If only they were tasty. All the animals with the highest population on the planet are tasty. We'd never let chickens go endangered. There are 50 billion of them, more than any other bird species.

Koalas' biggest adaptation is "let's eat something so disgusting we'll taste disgusting, too."

Being cute just isn't enough. You've got to be tasty.
 
Koalas are legitimately one of the dumbest animals on the planet, but this still sucks. I do wonder what research has been done in what they contribute to biodiversity other than being prey for smarter species.
Nothing wants to eat them. Eucalyptus makes their meat poisonous to any scavenger/predator in Australia, so they literally exist to eat eucalyptus and die.
 
Koalas are legitimately one of the dumbest animals on the planet, but this still sucks. I do wonder what research has been done in what they contribute to biodiversity other than being prey for smarter species.
arent they literally smoothbrained as opposed to other mammals that have wrinkly brains? wrinkly brain basically allows for maximum brain in a limited amount of space.
 
Nothing wants to eat them. Eucalyptus makes their meat poisonous to any scavenger/predator in Australia, so they literally exist to eat eucalyptus and die.
I hope that means eating eucalyptus is part of their survival strategy, otherwise what sort of creature would want to specialize in eating what's literally the worst food source in the world?
 
Is there even a purpose to having koalas eating eucalyptus leaves, anyway? Like what even happens if the eucalyptus doesn't get its leaves eaten? They fucking explode from the heat and spread fires further, but that's with or without koalas. The 2019 bushfires were started either by a lightning strike or by the sun being a hot motherfucker, right? And Australia's been going through an intense drought that helped to worsen those fires. That's literally Mother Nature speeding up the process to letting these particular animals die out. It's time to let them go.

Anyhoo for a brief anecdote because it's hilarious, I knew someone who literally said the koala was her spirit animal.
 
>urbanisation and habitat loss

Since the 2000 Olympics, when they had less than 19 million population, Australia has imported somewhere between 2.5 and 3.5 million immigrants, mostly from Asia and India.
They all need places to live and farmland to support them and this is why urban sprawl and land clearing is devastating the koala's preferred habitats.

Save the koala; bash a paki.
 
Is there even a purpose to having koalas eating eucalyptus leaves, anyway? Like what even happens if the eucalyptus doesn't get its leaves eaten? They fucking explode from the heat and spread fires further, but that's with or without koalas. The 2019 bushfires were started either by a lightning strike or by the sun being a hot motherfucker, right? And Australia's been going through an intense drought that helped to worsen those fires. That's literally Mother Nature speeding up the process to letting these particular animals die out. It's time to let them go.
i wonder, could you theoretically force feed them something else. like mush it up and force it down their throats.
 
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