The secret rescuers of a national pest
‘‘Some people hate them [possums] so much they threaten to find out where you live and kill them.’’
Little Batman is fighting for his life.
The baby possum struggles to feed after the soft roof of his mouth was damaged when he was ripped from his mother’s pouch by a hunter.
Too young to regulate his body temperature, the six-week-old is fed through a tube by his carer, who tends to his every need, desperately trying to keep him alive.
She may be breaking the law by doing so.
Sally (not her real name) is part of an underground network across the country, dedicated to saving the lives of animals that are, to most Kiwis, one of our most hated pests.
She has rescued about 150 possums, and currently has 10 of them in her care.
Threats from the public, and fear of authorities removing their pets, kept most rescuers ‘‘underground’’, she said.
‘‘Some people hate them [possums] so much they threaten to find out where you live and kill them.’’
Possums, first introduced from Australia in 1837 to establish a fur trade, are known to spread tuberculosis, and decimate native plants and animals. They have no natural predators here, and now number about 47 million.
Babies, or joeys, are born the size of jellybeans. Most of those that find their way to Sally and her sympathisers come from hunters who have killed the mother only to find a baby in her pouch, or from people who stop to check the pouches of possums killed on the roads.
Sick and orphaned possums are then moved around the network of rescuers.
One Kapiti rescuer said possums made ‘‘loving and loyal’’ pets that more people should take the time to understand.
She had owned three over the years and, although she kept them inside, felt there was little harm in releasing them if they were desexed.
A Horowhenua woman, owner of six possums, said getting vets to de-sex the animals would ensure that they died out.
‘‘Just like the feral cat populations. If they’re not breeding, then there’s no harm.’’
The law on keeping possums is confusing. The Department of Conservation says they cannot be kept without a permit. But the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) says they can if the regional council allows it.
‘‘We’re not the possum police,’’ DOC spokesman Herb Alexander said. ‘‘We’ve got better things to do than creep around backyards looking for pet possums. We don’t get anal about enforcing the law, but we don’t encourage it.’’
Permits for possum-keeping were not handed out by the department, unless it was for the purposes of research – ‘‘Basically for people who are researching how to kill them.’’
An MPI spokesman said the Biosecurity Act let people keep a pet possum without a permit as long as their regional council allowed it.
‘‘There are, however, strict criteria around breeding possums and putting them on display.’’
According to the Greater Wellington Regional Council, possums can be kept as pets, but cannot be released, bred or sold.
Forest & Bird spokesman Kevin Hackwell said it was wishful thinking if owners thought their pet possums wouldn’t harm the environment.
‘‘The reality is that, if they want to look after the environment, they should be humanely euthanising the young.’’
SAFE director of research and education Andrew Knight said the loss of native birds was tragic, but the biggest threat to biodiversity came from people.
‘‘Possums are simply trying to fulfil their natural urges to survive and reproduce. We do not support killing some animals to save others.’’