A Deakin University scientist believes the integrity of NSW’s national parks was on the line in the NSW state election.
Professor Don Driscoll, Director of Deakin’s Centre for Integrative Ecology within the School of Life and Environmental Sciences, said the vast differences in the policies of the major political parties would affect ongoing national park management.
“For Kosciuszko ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Park, the election had the potential to deliver everything from restoration and recovery to ongoing environmental decay and species extinctions; a lot rested in the hands of NSW voters,” Professor Driscoll said.
The Liberal/³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Coalition has pledged to enact its Kosciuszko Wild Horse Heritage Bill, ensuring horses remain in Kosciuszko ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Park in their thousands. Under the Act, feral horses take precedence over the conservation goals within the park’s management plan.
In contrast, the Labor Party and the Shooters Fishers and Farmers Party pledged to enact an earlier management plan to keep 600 feral horses in the national park.
“Peer-reviewed literature shows that even small numbers of horses lead to cumulative environmental degradation, putting multiple species at greater risk of extinction and threatening water quality by degrading streams and bogs. It is not clear whether any areas of the national park are robust enough to withstand horse impacts,” Professor Driscoll said.
Despite this, the Liberal/³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Coalition, the Animal Justice Party and the Labor Party all proposed to keep feral horses in sacrificial areas of the park.
Professor Driscoll said the NSW Greens was the only party that appeared to have fully appreciated the scientific advice, with a plan to remove 90 per cent of the population in three years, before moving to full eradication, using a full range of humane control methods. Both Labor and the Greens committed to multi-million dollar restoration programs and both would repeal the Kosciuszko Wild Horse Heritage Bill.
“So the choice was quite stark,” explained Professor Driscoll, “Under the policies of the Liberal/³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ coalition, thousands of horses will continue to degrade ecosystems, placing species like the broad-toothed rat and mountain pygmy possum at greater risk of declines. What’s more, feral horses will suffer slow deaths during droughts, as we saw in Kosciuszko in 2018, or after fire, which we saw in Guy Fawkes ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Park.”
Feral horses would have also faced extreme animal welfare compromises under the Animal Justice Party, he said.
“The Animal Justice Party’s simplistic approach of not permitting culling in an attempt to be kind to animals, will ultimately lead to more grotesque animal suffering after fires and during droughts, when horses starve to death,” Professor Driscoll said.
The Kosciuszko ecosystem could have begun to be restored under Labor party plans, but Labor would have continued the precedence set by the Coalition of planning to keep a feral animal in an area protected for native Australian species.
Under the Greens’ plan, the national park’s ecosystems would have been restored, but they would have also restored the integrity of the national parks system as a place where Australia’s biodiversity was given priority for protection.
“With only 10 per cent of the area of NSW in the protected area system, it’s important to draw the line and plan to remove all feral animals where that can be achieved,” Professor Driscoll said.