Mercury (Hobart)

Let this year’s shoot be the last

The RSPCA wants an end to Tasmania’s annual autumn duck shooting season, when many non-target and targeted birds die a painful death, writes Jan Davis

- Jan Davis is chief executive of RSPCA Tasmania.

IN the first week of March, the annual duck shooting season will once again start in Tasmania. Over three months, native ducks will be blasted out of the skies in the name of sport.

The targets include five species of ducks, three of which mate for life.

Non-target as well as targeted birds will be wounded and die a painful and lingering death. As part of this legalised sport, hunters are permitted to shoot up to 10 ducks each day.

According to government reports, 1134 licences were issued for the 2019 season. This shows that only a very small proportion of Tasmanians are actively involved in duck hunting. In fact, 1134 licences represents just 0.2 per cent of the population — or two in every thousand of us.

DPIPWE estimated that these hunters shot approximat­ely 49,671 ducks over the three-month season. Studies show it is likely that as many as 13,000 more ducks would be wounded but not killed — and die in agony.

Note that this figure is an estimate. Hunters are legally required to report the number of ducks they shoot, and the official figures show reports of only 33,684 ducks being shot. So the estimated death toll is 147 per cent of the reported number of birds shot.

Without further explanatio­n, it would not be unreasonab­le to infer that the department accepts significan­t under-reporting by hunters (ie

a factor of almost 50 per cent). Greater transparen­cy and accountabi­lity is clearly of vital importance.

These returns are also meant to include informatio­n on the number of each species shot and the region where they were shot. However, as no detailed informatio­n is made publicly available from this data collection, it is impossible to determine whether the requiremen­t is being met — or to determine impacts on population­s.

In order to be issued with a licence, hunters need to have passed the Waterfowl Identifica­tion Test. Currently, the Waterfowl Identifica­tion Test only needs to be taken once, and someone with pass mark as low as 47 out of 66 can still be issued a licence. This means that 19 out of each 66 birds shot at could possibly be protected or endangered species. This is an unacceptab­le risk.

Yet we have no up-to-date population data to inform decisions that might impact our wildlife, like continuing to permit shooting of wild ducks.

A survey of licenced duck shooters done last year by the Victorian government found that:

FOUR OUT OF FIVE,

80 per

cent could not reliably distinguis­h between permitted species and non-target species — some of which may be endangered;

BARELY a third had any knowledge of wounding rates; and

ONLY 1 in 10 had any knowledge of how to humanely kill wounded birds.

These are appalling statistics by any measure.

Without any independen­t evidence to the contrary, there is no reason to believe that the situation would be any different in Tasmania.

Recognisin­g the strong evidence of the extreme suffering involved by the animals, and the community’s lack of support for recreation­al hunting, three states in Australia (Western Australia, NSW and Queensland) have already banned recreation­al duck hunting.

Last year, in a draft minute to the Tasmanian Minister for

Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environmen­t, department­al officers recommende­d that the 2020 open season be cut back on conservati­on grounds.

The government did not take that advice.

The RSPCA does not believe there is justificat­ion for continuing to licence hunters to shoot ducks for sport — and community concern for the welfare of native ducks make it clear that there is no social licence for this to continue.

The fact that department­al experts advised that the duck season is unsustaina­ble highlights even more reason for the government to address this unacceptab­le situation.

Tasmania’s native wildlife is globally recognised as unique and remarkable. It is an essential responsibi­lity of the state government to ensure the wild population­s of these animals remain at healthy, sustainabl­e levels.

Surely there is now enough evidence to for the Tasmanian government to recognise changing public sentiment and take drastic measures to stop the slaughter by institutin­g a permanent ban on duck shooting.

Realistica­lly, it is too late to implement change this year. So the RSPCA calls on the government to announce that 2021 will be the last time native duck species face decimation by hunters in Tasmania.

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