logo
Plea to Aussies over controversial substance found in bush: 'Lethal'

Plea to Aussies over controversial substance found in bush: 'Lethal'

Yahoo13-02-2025

Most Australians have heard of 1080 bait. Many of us know that it's a dangerous and toxic substance used as a poison, but not everyone is aware of exactly why it's used in the first place.
Growing opposition to the use of 1080 has sparked fears that its use may be stopped, causing invasive threats to proliferate in the Aussie outback — with one authority arguing it serves as a lifeline for Australia's most threatened animals as well as the country's most vulnerable citizens.
"It's the thin green line we have that protects our threatened animals," Gillian Basnett from the Centre for Invasive Species Solutions told Yahoo. "Without it, we are choosing cats and foxes, rabbits and pigs over our native wildlife and that is not a choice I would make."
Gillian, who runs the nation's feral cat and fox response, argues that negativity surrounding the baiting program runs the risk of "losing it as an option". "If we lost the use of 1080 as a tool and as a bait, the outcome would be devastating to our wildlife and our farmers," she said.
"It's a hard thing to talk about because we don't want to go out and kill animals but we have introduced them, they're having an impact and it's up to us to do something about it."
Sodium fluoroacetate, known commonly as 1080, is an odourless, tasteless white powder that is diluted with water to concentrations specific to the species being targeted.
The active ingredient is a naturally occurring toxin found in more than 30 species of native Australian "poison pea" plants from the Gastrolobium genus. Because of this, native species have developed a high tolerance to the toxin which invasive species do not have which means if ingested, researchers say they won't be harmed.
However recent research by Deakin University found a large number of poison baits buried according to best practice methods are being dug up and eaten by non-target animals.
The research found that foxes and dingoes accounted for just 12 per cent of the baits dug up or eaten. Of the 146 interactions with baits, 88 per cent were non-target species – primarily, native mice species such as Mitchell's hopping mouse (Notomys mitchellii) and silky mice (Pseudomys apodemoides).
"Our research shows predator baiting has the potential to harm more native species than previously realised," scientists said.
But Gillian argues that this contributes to a "misunderstanding" that 1080 kills native wildlife which is "not the reality". "To have effective control it needs us to be able to use all of the tools we have available. That means lethal control," she said.
Australia's mammal extinction crisis is one of the worst in the world, with Australia's nature conservation councils describing it as a "big disappointment".
This largely comes from the threat posed by thousands of invasive species continuing to wreak havoc on our precious native wildlife. Across the country, predators like foxes and feral cats have resulted in dozens of native species being driven to the brink — or wiped out entirely.
"We've already lost 32 species that have died out with predation of cats and foxes and likely dingoes," Gillian said. Without 1080, she says we'd lose "so much more".
Across the country, other tactics are being used to win the fight surrounding these prolific invaders such as huge fences to keep them out. Viruses have been developed to help reduce rabbit populations and a herpes virus has been proposed to stop invasive carp.
But Gillian said that 1080 is the best tool to manage foxes and cats. "It's environmentally sustainable, doesn't accumulate in the environment, it's effective. It is the thing that we have holding back the impacts [of cats and foxes]."
She admits we should "100 per cent look for alternatives", but cautions that the development of viruses could take "decades".
"If we stopped 1080 now, we're looking at 50-100 years before that is effectively controlled and we'll have lost more species," she said.
Gillian admits that it's "hard" to sell poison as a method of eradication. "I fully can understand the difficulty people have with that idea. It's hard to think about. But it is also a great opportunity we have to right some wrongs of the past.
"We introduced cats and foxes. It's not their fault but they are causing a lot of damage and we need to put things right and make that choice and support that choice.
"We need the public to support land managers in doing it and we need to recognise that the benefits to our native wildlife far outweigh the risks."
Not only is wildlife impacted, but so too are Aussie farmers who are seriously impacted by this predation.
Cats spread diseases and can "really impact" the financial and emotional well-being of the farming community.
🍻 Surprising twist after hundreds of Aussies boycott Great Northern beer
🌱 Crews caught with illegal garden items fined $60k amid 'serious' crackdown
😍 Gardener's incredible backyard transformation highlights 'growing trend'
One of the more controversial target species of 1080 baiting programs is dingoes, or wild dogs. While they are protected in some states like Victoria, in others they are deemed a pest.
Dingoes have long caused problems with livestock in Australia, with a 5,614km fence being built across Australia to keep them away from farm animals.
Past research has suggested that hybrids of dogs and dingoes were common in the wild across Australia — and this research was used to defend the culling of these animals. But more recent research shows dingoes are not breeding with domestic dogs in the wild.
"We hear a lot that 1080 kills native wildlife and what people are talking about is dingoes," Gillian said.
Because dingoes have been present in Australia for up to 8,000 years, they haven't had as much time to develop tolerance to the bait.
"It will kill dingoes, and that is a reality," she said. She believes that arguing about the genetics of such predators "muddies the water" because regardless, they are being targeted.
"We manage over-abundant species" that are having an impact on vulnerable wildlife, she explained.
"Dingoes can be that in some areas. In areas where dingoes, foxes and cats are all prevalent in the same area, vulnerable species like koalas, bilbies and rock wallabies don't stand a chance.
"We're managing the impacts of predation regardless of which of that it is," she said.
For concerned pet owners, Gillian warns that it is their responsibility to keep their pets safe.
"People see the outcomes and have that emotional connection to their pet which is totally understandable," she said of pet dogs who have ingested the poison and died, prompting calls to ban the product.
"I can totally understand the trauma of having your pet die, it is tragic," she said. "But we also need to take responsibility for our pets by not taking dogs where we shouldn't, keeping pet cats contained and protecting them from these impacts.
"If there are baiting programs undertaken to protect our wildlife, they are signposted and so it's important to heed those signs, take notice of areas where there is baiting and to not take your pets into those areas," she said.
For those roadtripping in cars and caravans to go camping or travel the country, she advises owners to check with landowners to find out where baiting programs are happening.
"Do the research and make sure where you're taking your pet is allowed and it is safe to do so," she said.
Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@yahoonews.com.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple Watch 圈圈真的準?美國有研究指 Apple Watch 部份運動數據追蹤表現準度不足
Apple Watch 圈圈真的準?美國有研究指 Apple Watch 部份運動數據追蹤表現準度不足

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Apple Watch 圈圈真的準?美國有研究指 Apple Watch 部份運動數據追蹤表現準度不足

Yahoo購物節,6月2至13日正式舉行!集合全球精選著數的網上大型購物節:波鞋低至36折、手袋低至4折、自助餐半價、旅遊產品買一送一等,更有獨家優惠為您而設,把握限時兩星期優惠,1Click買盡全世界! 早前消委會就發表智能手錶評測報告,強調智能手錶、手環的運動數據都是估算,只適宜作參考之用。其實智能手錶在追蹤不同數據時準度的確存在著誤差。最近美國就有研究指 Apple Watch 於運動時記錄燃燒了多少卡路里的數據,準度並不是想像中的高。 美國密西西比大學的研究人員做了一個關於 Apple Watch 的研究,分析了 56 數據得出一個整合分析,並以 Apple Watch 每一項的表現都與標準的醫療級工具進行了比較。結果顯示 Apple Watch 於測量心率及步數方面極大部份情況下是準確的。研究人員指,測心率與步數的平均絕對百分比誤差(即衡量準確度的標準指標)分別為 4.43% 與 8.17%,然而估算燃燒了卡路里數據表現就達 27.96%。對於一般大眾買到的穿戴式裝置而言,低於 10% 的誤差值表現已被視為「十分優秀」,但研究團隊測試 Apple Watch 在走路、跑步、混合強度訓練和踩單車等多種活動中計算用戶燃燒了多少卡路里的數據時,卻發現其估算值大幅超出可接受範圍。 不過研究人員同時指出,這個數據本身就相當難以估算,因為涉及許多變數如體重及運動方式等等。因此,不要把每個數字都當作 100% 準確,而是可當成其中一種鼓勵的工具,達至恆常運動、保持追蹤習慣並維持動力。團隊還指出,目前 Apple Watch 的準確度已提高了不少,顯示蘋果在硬體及演算法方面都在逐步改進,而指出弱點可幫助開發者獲得更真實的回應建議,協助他們進一步研究,以製出更好的感應器或演算法,提升智能手錶追蹤健康數據的表現。 更多內容: 9to5mac 消委會試智能手錶運動偵測,Garmin 最貴最高分,一款千元級高評分!Apple、Samsung、華為各有高低 智能手錶推薦 2025 | Apple、三星、Garmin 如何選?三鐵、跑山、單車各有不同,睇清楚點揀! 緊貼最新科技資訊、網購優惠,追隨 Yahoo Tech 各大社交平台! 🎉📱 Tech Facebook: 🎉📱 Tech Instagram: 🎉📱 Tech WhatsApp 社群: 🎉📱 Tech WhatsApp 頻道: 🎉📱 Tech Telegram 頻道:

Unknown 'world full of aliens' discovered in deep hole in Aussie outback
Unknown 'world full of aliens' discovered in deep hole in Aussie outback

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Unknown 'world full of aliens' discovered in deep hole in Aussie outback

A 'world full of aliens' has been unearthed by researchers in a hole on the side of a barren Aussie hill. While the swimming pool-sized dig site in South Australia's outback may not look like much, its stratified layers of sandstone provide a glimpse into life that existed at the bottom of a shallow sea some 555-million-years ago. "We're finding things that have been hidden for over half a billion years,' South Australian Museum palaeontologist Diego García-Bellido, who has been chipping away at the secret fossil bed with his team for the past few years, said. The associated professor and his crew of 10 researchers and volunteers just returned from another 10-day stint at the excavation site in the Nilpena Ediacara National Park, 520km north of Adelaide. 'We found a new outcrop some kilometres away from the original Ediacara fossil beds, which were discovered in the early 2000s,' García-Bellido said. After extracting each layer of rock by hand, researchers were thrilled to uncover a variety of fossilised organisms that once lived on the 20 metre-deep sea floor, including Dickinsonia, Tribrachidium, and Spriggina — all of which lived during the late Ediacaran period. At that time, Australia was still attached to Antartica, and the first animals were starting to evolve. 'The sea floor was covered with a microbial mat — not unlike what grows at the bottom of a swimming pool during winter — and there were a few organisms living and feeding on that mat,' García-Bellido said. While some of the 'early complex organisms' did 'some of the things that animals do', they can't quite be classified as such, he added. 'These are the closest things to aliens that we have on our planet's history.' 🏡 Aussie renter's 250 million-year-old discovery in inner-city backyard 🌳 Incredible photos capture 'magical' phenomenon in Aussie forests 🏕️ Ancient discovery near popular Aussie camping spot sparks delight The impressions on the sandstone have been digitised and measured so further research can be conducted. 'We look at how they are distributed on the fossil surface and how they grow,' García-Bellido explained. 'How the juvenile is different to the adult, and what is the spatial relationships between each of the organisms. 'What this is telling us, is the world back then was much more complicated than we expected. We are finding things that have never been discovered before.' The Ediacara fossils are now on display at the South Australian Museum for anyone who wants to see them first-hand. Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.

MRNA, Used in Covid Shots, May Help Rid the Body of H.I.V.
MRNA, Used in Covid Shots, May Help Rid the Body of H.I.V.

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • New York Times

MRNA, Used in Covid Shots, May Help Rid the Body of H.I.V.

The technology that powered Covid vaccines may also lead scientists to a cure for H.I.V. Using mRNA, Australian researchers said they were able to trick the virus to come out of hiding, a crucial step in ridding the body of it entirely. The research, published last week in Nature Communications, is still preliminary, and so far, has been shown to be successful only in a lab. But it suggests that mRNA has potential far beyond its use in vaccines as a means to deliver therapies against stubborn adversaries. Short for messenger RNA, mRNA is a set of instructions for a gene. In the case of Covid vaccines, the instructions were for a piece of the coronavirus. In the new study, they are for molecules key to targeting H.I.V. 'mRNA is just this miraculous — I really do think miraculous — tool to deliver things that you want into places that were not possible before,' said Dr. Sharon Lewin, director of the Cumming Global Center for Pandemic Therapeutics in Melbourne, who led the study. Vaccines deploying mRNA instruct the body to produce a fragment of the virus, which then sets off the body's immune response. In the United States, the shots were initially hailed for turning back the pandemic, then viewed by some with suspicion and fear. Some officials, including Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., have falsely said that they are highly dangerous and even deadly. Last week, the Department of Health and Human Services sought to limit the vaccine's availability to pregnant women, children and healthy younger adults. The administration also canceled a nearly $600 million contract with the drugmaker Moderna to develop an mRNA shot for humans against bird flu. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store