Why are kangaroos culled in Canberra?

2021-05-20

Firstly, thank you for visiting this page and seeking out more information. Whether you’re learning about it for the first time, or you’ve known about it for years, we understand this action in the name of conservation can be shocking or confusing.

The Greens have a plan to make Canberra a biodiversity refuge where species can thrive, even where their habitats interface with our city and suburbs. The Greens’ initiatives are focused on supporting our community to care for country and protecting and enhancing our ecosystems, through a network of wildlife corridors, employing more conservation workers, funding more First Nations-led conservation initiatives, and more.

The ACT is home to many endangered species that are impacted by urban development, climate change, bushfires and other causes of habitat loss. We can build a better normal for the animals, plants and people who live on this country. As we do, we are committed to ensuring any management of animals is led by evidence, moral consideration, and an ecological approach to our relationship with nature. 

Reducing animal populations to protect biodiversity seems contradictory because it’s like having drastic surgery to save a life. It’s nobody’s go-to option. It’s the difficult decision we are forced to consider when too many big things have already gone wrong. In this case, Australia’s cities have grown up in the middle of habitats, our society has discarded traditional land management, and we’ve led our species into an extinction crisis.

Kangaroos are not the enemy. They suffer like all grassland species when their population grows, there’s no unoccupied or habitable space for them to move to, and no way for them to get there. Our kangaroos shouldn’t have to face starvation or a gun; Shooting is a conservation method of last resort.

The Greens are in governments and parliaments around Australia to call attention to these problems and do the hard work to address them, so we can truly learn to care for this country, gently, sustainably, and continuously. The need for this kind of land management proves we’re not there yet.

Do the Greens support this ‘conservation method of last resort’?

We have looked carefully at this issue and have asked many questions about the policy, the science, and alternative approaches. Since 2004 we have reluctantly but consistently accepted the necessity of managing populations of Eastern Grey Kangaroos to protect threatened temperate grassland ecosystems.

However, acceptance doesn’t mean that we ‘set and forget’. The Greens continue to lead the ACT Government to investigate and implement non-lethal alternatives to reduce the population of kangaroos and protect the biodiversity of Canberra’s nature reserves.

What non-lethal methods does the government use?

In 2021, for the first time, fertility control will be delivered as an integral part of the kangaroo management strategy. In recent years, the ACT Greens secured additional funding for trials, which first delivered contraceptives by hand, then by darts. With the dart program now in place, the growth of kangaroo populations in stressed habitats will reduce over time.

What else is better this time?

First Nations knowledge is critical to our understanding of the natural environment and approaches to caring for country.  A key concern of both Traditional Custodians and the wider ACT community has been not letting these beautiful kangaroos go to waste.  In addition to recent practices of utilising carcasses to produce baits for predator control programs, for the first time in 2021 they will also be used to supply food to the threatened species program, and for Indigenous interpretive activities at Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve. 

Learning to care for country, repair the land, and rebalance ecosystems is a journey the ACT Greens are committed to continuing. 

Couldn’t some kangaroos just be moved to a different area?

Unfortunately, investigations into translocation have not shown a way to successfully move large populations of kangaroos, due to low survival rates following relocation, and the lack of appropriate areas for these kangaroos to move to.

Mobs are territorial. They don’t live in peace with other mobs and all of Canberra’s suitable habitat for these kangaroos is already occupied. Culls to reduce kangaroo populations happen all over Australia because habitats and biodiversity are threatened everywhere. Only by addressing the causes of the extinction crisis and shrinking habitats will we ultimately reduce the need to intervene to rebalance ecosystems.

What about traditional land management techniques?

Traditionally, kangaroos have been hunted by predators – people and dingoes – who utilised kangaroos in the food chain. Without these predators, kangaroo populations grow unchecked, impacting on their environment like never before.

The ACT Greens are committed to listening deeply to First Nations people, to integrate cultural practices into environmental management and restoration. Over the coming year we are committed to engaging the ACT Government in further discussions with Traditional Custodians, building on the consultations that have already occurred with the Dhawura Ngunnawal Committee.

Who authorises the shooting of kangaroos?

Independent statutory decisions are taken by the Conservator of Flora and Fauna each year, based on the expert advice of ACT Government researchers, ecologists and Parks and Conservation Service officers, as well as extensive monitoring of vegetation and kangaroo numbers.

In the ACT, the Conservator is established under the Nature Conservation Act 2014, to develop and oversee policies, programs and plans for the effective management of nature conservation in the ACT and to monitor the state of nature conservation in the ACT. This includes the management of kangaroos and their habitat.

Ministers in the ACT Government are provided information about kangaroo management and other nature conservation in the ACT but are not active decision-makers in this process.

Why shooting?

Shooting is recognised by the Commonwealth, state and territory governments and RSPCA Australia as the most humane method of kangaroo population management. This method of reducing animal populations is undertaken all over Australia, and in the ACT it is in strict accordance with the National Code of Practice for the Humane Shooting of Kangaroos and Wallabies for Non-Commercial Purposes.

In many instances, the ACT sets a higher standard than the Code, employing additional measures so that best-practice animal welfare standards are met and exceeded. These include proficiency testing for shooters to ensure a high level of accuracy, the use of silencers to reduce stress on nearby animals, and audits of the kangaroo management program. The timing of this intervention is also set to avoid the time of year when most females are caring for large but dependent young kangaroos.

Audits against the National Code of Practice are undertaken by trained veterinarians, with welfare and compliance audits undertaken in the ACT in 2013, 2015, and 2017. Full reports are publicly available online by searching ‘kangaroo audit’ on the ACT Environment website.   The 2015 assessment, which was published in a peer reviewed journal, describes that of the 136 kangaroos which were shot during veterinary observations, two animals were missed entirely. The wounding rate was zero, with a 98% instantaneous death rate.

What other grassland species are at risk?

Aside from the challenges kangaroos face then their movement is limited and they have access to limited resources, the temperate grassland ecosystems themselves are at risk, as well as the reptiles, ground feeding birds, insects and small mammals that depend on these grasslands for survival. Of particular concern are some designated threatened species, including the Hooded Robin, Brown Treecreeper Grassland Earless Dragon, Striped Legless Lizard, Pink-tailed Worm Lizard, and Perunga Grasshopper, which rely on an intact grassy layer for survival.

examples of threatened species
Image credit: Environment, Planning and Sustainable Development Directorate, ACT Government

As Greens in government we believe we have a moral and legal responsibility to balance the health and survival of all species, even where decisions are difficult and distressing.

For more information and answers to frequently asked questions, please visit: https://www.environment.act.gov.au/parks-conservation/plants-and-animals/urban-wildlife/kangaroos/2021-conservation-cull