Invasive fire ants nests found in southeast Queensland
Two nests of highly invasive red imported fire ants have been detected and destroyed outside of official biosecurity zones in Queensland.
Red fire ant nests were discovered by a local pest manager at the Harmony Estate, a new residential neighbourhood in the Sunshine Coast locality of Palmview, on Tuesday.
The following day, officers from the National Fire Ant Eradication program attended the site and destroyed the nests using insecticide injections.
Harmony Estate does not lie within one of the fire ant biosecurity zones, which are designed to restrict the movement of materials that could spread fire ants.
Over the past year, nine new fire ant outbreaks found outside official biosecurity containment zones have occurred on residential construction sites.
The National Fire Ant Eradication Program said they are continuing to work with developers who deal with materials that can carry fire ants, such as soil, pot plants, nursery stock, sand, gravel, grass, turf, hay, wood, or soil-moving equipment, to stop the spread.
A spokesperson from the National Fire Ant Eradication program said residents in the area should be on the lookout and report any other sightings of the highly invasive pest.
Extreme weather events, including ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred, have fuelled the spread as the insects were forced above ground and floated on top of flood waters, which carried them into new areas.
Since the beginning of March, the National Fire Ant Eradication Program has received 60 reports of extreme reactions to fire ant stings requiring medical attention in southeast Queensland.
Of those reports, 23 people required hospitalisation.
This surge has also reportedly led to the death of a pet dog in Logan.
Fire ant stings, while generally not life threatening, can cause severe allergic reactions such as anaphylaxis in some people.
The most common reaction is a burning sensation, redness and swelling.
In addition to health impacts, fire ants feed on fauna that nests or feeds on the ground, and can displace or eliminate native species.
While each insect is only 2-6 mm long, the Queensland government estimates that if not eradicated, the impacts of fire ants in Australia will surpass the combined damage done each year by all other pests, including feral cats, wild dogs, foxes, camels, rabbits and cane toads.
Native to South America, red imported fire ants were first detected in Brisbane, Queensland in 2001.
The National Fire Ant Eradication program has successfully eradicated six separate incursions in Queensland, and one each in New South Wales and Western Australia.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Advertiser
6 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Surgery lists balloon as hospitals plead for resources
Patients are waiting longer for elective surgery despite more procedures taking place as health workers demand more resources to tackle the growing crisis. The latest quarterly performance report from the NSW Bureau of Health Information on Wednesday show more than 100,000 people are on the waitlist, up seven per cent from a year earlier. That was despite 3.6 per cent more surgeries taking place in the March quarter, compared to the same quarter last year. Crucially, those waiting longer than critically recommended jumped a whopping 151 per cent over the year to 8857. The overall waitlist is just shy of the all-time peak, reached after widespread cancellations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reducing the waitlist after the pandemic only occurred with major extra resources, general surgeon and Australian Medical Association NSW vice president Fred Betros said. "We were doing extra theatre lists in the public hospital system, outsourcing public patients to private hospitals to get them done on lists there," he told AAP. "That's just not sustainable under the current resourcing that we have. "It's not from a lack of trying on the part of hospitals, administration staff, they're working their backsides off, it is purely resourcing not keeping up with the demands." Wait times are also blowing out, reaching 65 days for semi-urgent surgeries and 322 days for non-urgent procedures. Reality could be even worse than the quarterly figures suggest, with reports in recent days alleging major NSW public hospitals have manipulated surgery wait data to hit key performance indicators. Clinicians were often asked to class surgeries as less serious than they were to provide the hospital more time to complete it 'on time', Dr Betros told AAP. "The people that make these requests are often the meat in the sandwich, with pressure coming from above to meet KPIs, and pressure from doctors coming from below who won't recategorise," he said. "Sweeping it under the carpet is just compounding (the problem)." The AMA said better funding of public hospitals, improved work conditions and specialist positions and a focus on preventative measures, including a 'sugar tax', would improve the health system. Health Minister Ryan Park responded to Wednesday's figures by announcing a $23 million injection to facilitate 3500 extra surgeries. Overdue surgeries were 14,000 when Labor was elected in 2023 and dipped as low as 1850 nine months ago. Mr Park partly blamed the most recent increase on disruptions caused in northern NSW by Cyclone Alfred and "workforce availability" challenges. "For 12 years, the Liberals neglected our health system, presiding over a record number of overdue surgeries," he said. "From day one, tackling overdue surgeries has been our priority." Patients are waiting longer for elective surgery despite more procedures taking place as health workers demand more resources to tackle the growing crisis. The latest quarterly performance report from the NSW Bureau of Health Information on Wednesday show more than 100,000 people are on the waitlist, up seven per cent from a year earlier. That was despite 3.6 per cent more surgeries taking place in the March quarter, compared to the same quarter last year. Crucially, those waiting longer than critically recommended jumped a whopping 151 per cent over the year to 8857. The overall waitlist is just shy of the all-time peak, reached after widespread cancellations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reducing the waitlist after the pandemic only occurred with major extra resources, general surgeon and Australian Medical Association NSW vice president Fred Betros said. "We were doing extra theatre lists in the public hospital system, outsourcing public patients to private hospitals to get them done on lists there," he told AAP. "That's just not sustainable under the current resourcing that we have. "It's not from a lack of trying on the part of hospitals, administration staff, they're working their backsides off, it is purely resourcing not keeping up with the demands." Wait times are also blowing out, reaching 65 days for semi-urgent surgeries and 322 days for non-urgent procedures. Reality could be even worse than the quarterly figures suggest, with reports in recent days alleging major NSW public hospitals have manipulated surgery wait data to hit key performance indicators. Clinicians were often asked to class surgeries as less serious than they were to provide the hospital more time to complete it 'on time', Dr Betros told AAP. "The people that make these requests are often the meat in the sandwich, with pressure coming from above to meet KPIs, and pressure from doctors coming from below who won't recategorise," he said. "Sweeping it under the carpet is just compounding (the problem)." The AMA said better funding of public hospitals, improved work conditions and specialist positions and a focus on preventative measures, including a 'sugar tax', would improve the health system. Health Minister Ryan Park responded to Wednesday's figures by announcing a $23 million injection to facilitate 3500 extra surgeries. Overdue surgeries were 14,000 when Labor was elected in 2023 and dipped as low as 1850 nine months ago. Mr Park partly blamed the most recent increase on disruptions caused in northern NSW by Cyclone Alfred and "workforce availability" challenges. "For 12 years, the Liberals neglected our health system, presiding over a record number of overdue surgeries," he said. "From day one, tackling overdue surgeries has been our priority." Patients are waiting longer for elective surgery despite more procedures taking place as health workers demand more resources to tackle the growing crisis. The latest quarterly performance report from the NSW Bureau of Health Information on Wednesday show more than 100,000 people are on the waitlist, up seven per cent from a year earlier. That was despite 3.6 per cent more surgeries taking place in the March quarter, compared to the same quarter last year. Crucially, those waiting longer than critically recommended jumped a whopping 151 per cent over the year to 8857. The overall waitlist is just shy of the all-time peak, reached after widespread cancellations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reducing the waitlist after the pandemic only occurred with major extra resources, general surgeon and Australian Medical Association NSW vice president Fred Betros said. "We were doing extra theatre lists in the public hospital system, outsourcing public patients to private hospitals to get them done on lists there," he told AAP. "That's just not sustainable under the current resourcing that we have. "It's not from a lack of trying on the part of hospitals, administration staff, they're working their backsides off, it is purely resourcing not keeping up with the demands." Wait times are also blowing out, reaching 65 days for semi-urgent surgeries and 322 days for non-urgent procedures. Reality could be even worse than the quarterly figures suggest, with reports in recent days alleging major NSW public hospitals have manipulated surgery wait data to hit key performance indicators. Clinicians were often asked to class surgeries as less serious than they were to provide the hospital more time to complete it 'on time', Dr Betros told AAP. "The people that make these requests are often the meat in the sandwich, with pressure coming from above to meet KPIs, and pressure from doctors coming from below who won't recategorise," he said. "Sweeping it under the carpet is just compounding (the problem)." The AMA said better funding of public hospitals, improved work conditions and specialist positions and a focus on preventative measures, including a 'sugar tax', would improve the health system. Health Minister Ryan Park responded to Wednesday's figures by announcing a $23 million injection to facilitate 3500 extra surgeries. Overdue surgeries were 14,000 when Labor was elected in 2023 and dipped as low as 1850 nine months ago. Mr Park partly blamed the most recent increase on disruptions caused in northern NSW by Cyclone Alfred and "workforce availability" challenges. "For 12 years, the Liberals neglected our health system, presiding over a record number of overdue surgeries," he said. "From day one, tackling overdue surgeries has been our priority." Patients are waiting longer for elective surgery despite more procedures taking place as health workers demand more resources to tackle the growing crisis. The latest quarterly performance report from the NSW Bureau of Health Information on Wednesday show more than 100,000 people are on the waitlist, up seven per cent from a year earlier. That was despite 3.6 per cent more surgeries taking place in the March quarter, compared to the same quarter last year. Crucially, those waiting longer than critically recommended jumped a whopping 151 per cent over the year to 8857. The overall waitlist is just shy of the all-time peak, reached after widespread cancellations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reducing the waitlist after the pandemic only occurred with major extra resources, general surgeon and Australian Medical Association NSW vice president Fred Betros said. "We were doing extra theatre lists in the public hospital system, outsourcing public patients to private hospitals to get them done on lists there," he told AAP. "That's just not sustainable under the current resourcing that we have. "It's not from a lack of trying on the part of hospitals, administration staff, they're working their backsides off, it is purely resourcing not keeping up with the demands." Wait times are also blowing out, reaching 65 days for semi-urgent surgeries and 322 days for non-urgent procedures. Reality could be even worse than the quarterly figures suggest, with reports in recent days alleging major NSW public hospitals have manipulated surgery wait data to hit key performance indicators. Clinicians were often asked to class surgeries as less serious than they were to provide the hospital more time to complete it 'on time', Dr Betros told AAP. "The people that make these requests are often the meat in the sandwich, with pressure coming from above to meet KPIs, and pressure from doctors coming from below who won't recategorise," he said. "Sweeping it under the carpet is just compounding (the problem)." The AMA said better funding of public hospitals, improved work conditions and specialist positions and a focus on preventative measures, including a 'sugar tax', would improve the health system. Health Minister Ryan Park responded to Wednesday's figures by announcing a $23 million injection to facilitate 3500 extra surgeries. Overdue surgeries were 14,000 when Labor was elected in 2023 and dipped as low as 1850 nine months ago. Mr Park partly blamed the most recent increase on disruptions caused in northern NSW by Cyclone Alfred and "workforce availability" challenges. "For 12 years, the Liberals neglected our health system, presiding over a record number of overdue surgeries," he said. "From day one, tackling overdue surgeries has been our priority."


Perth Now
8 hours ago
- Perth Now
Surgery lists balloon as hospitals plead for resources
Patients are waiting longer for elective surgery despite more procedures taking place as health workers demand more resources to tackle the growing crisis. The latest quarterly performance report from the NSW Bureau of Health Information on Wednesday show more than 100,000 people are on the waitlist, up seven per cent from a year earlier. That was despite 3.6 per cent more surgeries taking place in the March quarter, compared to the same quarter last year. Crucially, those waiting longer than critically recommended jumped a whopping 151 per cent over the year to 8857. The overall waitlist is just shy of the all-time peak, reached after widespread cancellations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reducing the waitlist after the pandemic only occurred with major extra resources, general surgeon and Australian Medical Association NSW vice president Fred Betros said. "We were doing extra theatre lists in the public hospital system, outsourcing public patients to private hospitals to get them done on lists there," he told AAP. "That's just not sustainable under the current resourcing that we have. "It's not from a lack of trying on the part of hospitals, administration staff, they're working their backsides off, it is purely resourcing not keeping up with the demands." Wait times are also blowing out, reaching 65 days for semi-urgent surgeries and 322 days for non-urgent procedures. Reality could be even worse than the quarterly figures suggest, with reports in recent days alleging major NSW public hospitals have manipulated surgery wait data to hit key performance indicators. Clinicians were often asked to class surgeries as less serious than they were to provide the hospital more time to complete it 'on time', Dr Betros told AAP. "The people that make these requests are often the meat in the sandwich, with pressure coming from above to meet KPIs, and pressure from doctors coming from below who won't recategorise," he said. "Sweeping it under the carpet is just compounding (the problem)." The AMA said better funding of public hospitals, improved work conditions and specialist positions and a focus on preventative measures, including a 'sugar tax', would improve the health system. Health Minister Ryan Park responded to Wednesday's figures by announcing a $23 million injection to facilitate 3500 extra surgeries. Overdue surgeries were 14,000 when Labor was elected in 2023 and dipped as low as 1850 nine months ago. Mr Park partly blamed the most recent increase on disruptions caused in northern NSW by Cyclone Alfred and "workforce availability" challenges. "For 12 years, the Liberals neglected our health system, presiding over a record number of overdue surgeries," he said. "From day one, tackling overdue surgeries has been our priority."


Perth Now
20-05-2025
- Perth Now
Fitness star hospitalised after exposure to household horror
Fitness influencer Sophie Guidolin has been hospitalised with health issues after she was exposed to black mould inside her home. The 36-year-old was exposed to the dangerous fungi after her Gold Coast home suffered damage when ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred hit the Queensland coast in March. Guidolin has been in hospital since May 8 and told her 533,000 Instagram followers that she was 'literally just surviving her condition'. The mother-of-four said her condition worsened and she woke up in hospital to find her father had flown in from Adelaide to be by her side. Last week, the influencer also posted concerning updates on her Instagram that revealed her home was riddled with black mould. 'Sorry guys, since the update of hospitalisation on May 8, I am literally just surviving,' she said in a post on social media. 'I opened my eyes to find my dad crying at my condition, after flying from Adelaide. Sophie Guidolin with her son Kai in celebration of his 15th birthday. Credit: Instagram / @sophie_guidolin 'Thanks to my best friend and the serious legends at PRD in Burleigh, allowing sight unseen whilst I was in hospital, the boys are now secure in a 6-month rental with dad caring for them and trying to navigate everything. 'Please note my phone has been off, I am unable to speak, and am not ignoring anyone 'Just trying to get better as as possible. Again, I will try and get back to everyone as soon as possible.' According to Victoria's Better Health channel, mould growing in damp buildings can trigger nasal congestion, sneezing, coughing, wheezing, respiratory infections and worsen asthma and allergic conditions. Guidolin posted a selfie that showed her lying in a hospital bed wearing a face mask and hooked up to health monitors. 'I'm not ignoring anyone, just having a quick little retreat,' she captioned the photo. It comes after Guidolin claimed earlier this month that she is has lost thousands of dollars due to damage from ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred. Guidolin wasn't home at the time of the major storm as she had jetted off to Europe with her twin daughters Evie and Aria, nine. She claimed on Instagram she will have to pay up to $4000 a week in rent or $76,000 for three months to live in an Airbnb while she 'rebuilds'. Guidolin shares her twin daughters, and sons Ryder, 15, and Kai, 16, with ex-husband Nathan Wallace.