The Guardian Australia

Philanthro­pists' $1m pledge aims to double largest cat-free zone

- Naaman Zhou

A $1m donation to the fight against feral cats could help to double the size of the world’s largest cat-free sanctuary or help geneticall­y neuter cats, conservati­onists say.

Sydney philanthro­pists Andrew and Jane Clifford have pledged to match every donation made to the Australian Wildlife Conservanc­y up to $1m before the end of the financial year, hoping to create a $2m fund to eradicate Australia’s cat plague.

Feral cats kill one million native birds every night. They have caused the extinction of 20 native species and cover 99.8% of the continent.

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In May, the AWC completed the world’s longest cat-proof fence, creating a cat-free sanctuary that is being repopulate­d with endangered native mammals such as the bilby and burrowing bettong.

Now it is running a campaign for the Cliffords’ donation to be matched by 30 June.

The conservanc­y’s chief executive, Atticus Fleming, said if that target is met it would be enough to double the size of the cat-free sanctuary.

“There are very few gifts of this magnitude,” he said. “Hopefully, it will have a catalytic impact and inspire other parties to come to the table. It’s a game changer in terms of building momentum.”

The AWC is also working with the CSIRO on genetic technology research, and will use the funds to develop a genetic way to neuter feral cats.

“We want to help feral cats breed themselves out of existence by only having male babies,” Fleming said. “It’s such cutting-edge technology. We’ll have to wait a few decades. But if we don’t start now, it’ll take even longer. We’ve got to get cracking.”

Jane Clifford said she hoped the funding drive would become a grassroots campaign.

“We’ve been involved with AWC for a number of years and we know we need something that can solve the problem,” she said. “Cats just decimate animals every night. They kill 2,000 native animals a minute. That’s mind-blowing, really.

“It could be a really great grassroots campaign. I think there are so many people who are interested in the environmen­t, who want to do something, but don’t actually know what to do. Here’s a great Australian thing to do – help save a numbat, a bilby, a mala.”

The AWC is already planning to extend its existing fence, which surrounds the former Newhaven cattle station.

The 44km fence has created a 94 sq km cat-free area. The second stage would extend it with at least 135km of additional fencing to create a 700 sq km sanctuary.

Over 10 years, conservati­onists will then reintroduc­e 11 species of endangered marsupials, bringing numbers up from as low as 2,400 individual­s in some species to 18,000.

 ?? Photograph: Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Feral cats kill one million native birds every night.
Photograph: Getty Images/iStockphot­o Feral cats kill one million native birds every night.

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