The Columbus Dispatch

Disease, habitat loss endangerin­g koalas

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CANBERRA, Australia – Koalas were declared officially endangered Friday in eastern Australia as they fall prey to disease, lost habitat and other threats.

Federal Environmen­t Minister Sussan Ley downgraded their conservati­on status across the country’s east coast, in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory, on a recommenda­tion by the government’s Threatened Species Scientific Committee.

In 2020, a parliament­ary inquiry warned the species might become extinct before 2050 without urgent interventi­on.

The number of koalas in Queensland has fallen by half since 2001 due to drought, fires and deforestat­ion. Some are killed in attacks by dogs, or run over on roads.

“Koalas have gone from no-listing to vulnerable to endangered within a decade. That is a shockingly fast decline,” said Stuart Blanch, a conservati­on scientist with the World Wildlife Fund-australia.

“Today’s decision is welcome, but it won’t stop koalas from sliding toward extinction unless it’s accompanie­d by stronger laws and landholder incentives to protect their forest homes,” he said.

The Australian Koala Foundation estimates that there are less than 100,000 Koalas left in the wild, possibly as few as 43,000. Summer brushfires in 2019-20 killed at least 6,400 of the animals, as rescuers worked desperatel­y to save them and treat their injuries.

Ley said vaccines to prevent and treat chlamydia among koalas, the use of drones to study them and restoratio­n of habitat are ways to the government is helping protect the vulnerable marsupial.

The Australian Koala Foundation has called for legislatio­n to protect them and curb land clearing and mining projects that are wrecking their habitats. It said koalas also are in danger across Victoria and South Australia.

Deborah Tabart, chair of the foundation, said the designatio­n of koalas as endangered was “nothing but a token gesture.”

“Behind all the photo opportunit­ies and political rhetoric they (the federal government) continue to approve the destructio­n of koala habitat,” she said.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER/AP FILE ?? Activists are pushing for stronger protection­s for the koala, whose status has been moved from vulnerable to endangered.
MARTIN MEISSNER/AP FILE Activists are pushing for stronger protection­s for the koala, whose status has been moved from vulnerable to endangered.

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