Mercury (Hobart)

Critics take aim at fallow deer plan

- JESSICA HOWARD

THE state government says a recent survey found there are about 54,000 wild deer in Tasmania, but critics have hit out at the exclusion of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area from the survey.

Primary Industries and Water Minister Guy Barnett said on Friday a deer management plan would be developed to help the government attempt to balance the impacts of wild deer on agricultur­al production, conservati­on areas and forestry, while maintainin­g deer as a traditiona­l recreation­al hunting resource.

He said an aerial survey to estimate deer numbers, in response to a 2017 Legislativ­e Council inquiry, had found “an abundance” of about 54,000 wild fallow deer.

Mr Barnett said the survey confirmed there was “a sustainabl­e population”.

But Greens leader Cassy O’Connor said Mr Barnett was “failing farmers and the environmen­t”.

“In declaring the feral deer population as ‘sustainabl­e’, he is allowing them to breed in huge numbers, damage fencing, crops and wilderness areas unchecked,” she said.

“The survey ignored two thirds of the state [the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area].”

She said Mr Barnett must act to remove protection­s for feral deer.

Invasive Species Council CEO Andrew Cox said the group was disappoint­ed that three years after a parliament­ary inquiry found fallow deer had spread into sensitive conservati­on areas, the state government was “only now starting to develop a plan to tackle the problem”.

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