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The White Hat Guide to Introduced & Feral Animals in Australia

After continental drift had separated Australia from other land masses it remained isolated for a large period of time with the local species co-evolving and adapting. In some ways it could be considered like the Galapagos so that when other animals were introduced to the mix the introduced animals often had no natural predators and were able to cause enormous upheaval. By far the most damaging animals to be introduced were Aboriginal man and European man, but often quite small species have also had a large effect on the environment.

Aboriginal man

Somewhere between 40,000 and 60,000 years ago, Aboriginal man arrived in Greater Australia and quickly spread over most of the landmass. Their effect on the environment was devastating. Within a relatively short time the Australian megafauana were extinct and it appears that Aboriginal man was successful in killing off any animals larger than themselves. Later practices such as fire farming were to cause the extinction of still more species. Eventually, the altered environment was able to reassert itself and by the time of European contact there was an unstable but sustainable equilibrium between man and the rest of the environment. Details of the ways in which the arrival of Aboriginal man changed the Australian environment for ever are discussed in books such as Tim Flannery's celebrated The Future Eaters.

Dingo

The dingo appears to have been introduced about 3,500 years ago, probably by island hopping traders from South East Asia. It, along with Aboriginal man, seems to be responsible for the extinction of the Tasmanian devil and thylacine on the mainland. In a touch of modern irony, it has currently been suggested that this recently (in geological terms) introduced species should be fostered in order to reduce the damage caused by even more recently introduced species. See article here.

European man

Domesticated farm animals

European bee

Australia has varieties of native bee but the European bee proved necessary for the pollination of European-style crops and plants. Escaped feral populations of these European bees are now responsible for the pollination of most crops in Australia and without them industries such as almond growing could not exist in their current form.

Feral cat

House mouse

Black rat

Rabbit

On Christmas Day 1859, ten pairs of rabbits arrived by boat in Corio Bay. They had been imported by a Mister Thomas Austin of Barwon Park to provide suitable game for hunting. The offspring of these ten pairs of rabbits were to overrun the country in remarkably short time and cause enormous damage.

Fox

Introduced in the 1850s

Myna Bird

Introduced in 1862, this aggressive bird out-competes local species for food and habitat.

Horse

Donkey

Camel

Goat,

Pig

Feral cattle

such as buffalo.

Cane Toad

The cane toad was introduced in 1935  as an official attempt to control the grey-backed beetle in the cane fields of Queensland. The Australian Bureau of Sugar Experimental Stations imported about 100 of them for this purpose and the rest is history.

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