The Mercury News

Australia declares struggling koalas an endangered species

New classifica­tion won't force changes

- By Manan Luthra

SYDNEY >> The Australian government on Friday declared the koala an endangered species, as drought, bush fires, disease and habitat loss have drasticall­y reduced the numbers of an animal that is an emblem of the country's unique wildlife.

The announceme­nt, by the country's environmen­t minister, came two years after a parliament­ary inquiry predicted that koalas could be extinct by 2050 without urgent government interventi­on.

Reclassifi­cation from vulnerable to endangered does not require the Australian government to take any special action. But it separately announced that it would adopt a recovery plan for the koala issued by the country's environmen­tal department.

That plan would aid the creation of laws protecting koalas and their natural woodland habitats. Additional­ly, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced last month that the government would commit 50 million Australian dollars ($35.7 million) over four years to koala recovery and conservati­on efforts.

The plight of the koala gained global attention in 2019 when bush fires raged over millions of acres in Australia, blackening the animal's habitats. A report commission­ed by the World Wildlife Fund-Australia estimated that 60,000 koalas had been “killed, injured or affected in some way.”

In response, the Australian government committed 18 million Australian dollars ($12.8 million) to be split between restoring the koala's habitats and investing in koala health research.

In 2020, WWF-Australia, the Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare and the Humane Society Internatio­nal collective­ly nominated the animal for listing as an endangered species. The groups found that koala population­s in the states of Queensland and New South Wales had decreased by 50% or more since 2001. It's unclear how many koalas remain.

While the animal welfare groups welcomed the Australian government's actions announced Friday, others said that key problems — specifical­ly land clearing, deforestat­ion and resulting habitat loss — had been neglected.

Deborah Tabart, chair of the Australian Koala Foundation, said the animal's new status “doesn't mean anything.” The federal government, she added, “may be offering our koalas a nice new word, but behind all the photo opportunit­ies and political rhetoric they continue to approve the destructio­n of the koala habitat.”

 ?? MATTHEW ABBOTT — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A rescued koala in Adelaide, Australia, in January 2018. Years of drought, fires and habitat loss have drasticall­y reduced the population of the iconic marsupial.
MATTHEW ABBOTT — THE NEW YORK TIMES A rescued koala in Adelaide, Australia, in January 2018. Years of drought, fires and habitat loss have drasticall­y reduced the population of the iconic marsupial.

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