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Call to stop killing Victoria's threatened wild dingoes



Animals Australia has called on the Andrews Government to stop killing Victoria’s threatened dingoes before they become the latest species to join the state’s growing list of extinct mammals.

Even though they are listed as a threatened and protected native species in Victoria, dingoes continue to be trapped, shot and are the target of mass ground and aerial baiting with the controversial 1080 poison across hundreds of kilometres of their national park habitat each year to appease agricultural interests.

The ABC 7.30 Report aired harrowing footage obtained by Defend The Wild of dingoes being trapped and killed by state government “wild dog” controllers in the state’s north. Despite their listing as a threatened species over a decade ago, the Victorian Government has made no effort to research how many dingoes remain in the wild. According to the government’s own figures, only 1249 livestock were killed by predation in 2021-22 from 22 million livestock while 1376 dingoes were killed.

“How can the Andrews Government possibly justify killing more of a threatened native species than the livestock it is accused of killing? The government’s figures do not include all the dingoes and other native species killed by its aerial bombardment of national parks with 1080 poison,” Animals Australia strategy director Lyn White said.

“Given that Australia holds the dubious title as the global leader of mammal extinctions and Victoria has the highest number of threatened species of all the states, it’s appalling that the government is deliberately driving a keystone species towards extinction through its destructive policies. The very behaviour that led to dingoes being listed as ‘threatened’ and ‘protected’ in Victoria continues, facilitated and promoted by the government, with even a $120 bounty paid to hunters for every dingo shot.”

Animals Australia has also called on the Andrews  Government to adopt the recommendations of last December’s parliamentary Inquiry into the Decline of Ecosystems in Victoria, which called for the “Order of Council” to be revoked, the use of 1080 poison to be banned and the bounty to be reviewed.

The government was due to respond to the inquiry report within six months but is yet to do so. Dingoes perform a vital role in Victoria’s ecosystems keeping introduced predators, such as foxes and feral cats, at bay.

“Nearly all of the animals that are cruelly trapped and killed have been found to be pure-bred dingoes or dingo-dominant hybrids and not ‘wild dogs’.,” Ms White said. “The term ‘wild dogs’ is a euphemism adopted to falsely smear a native species  and make the government’s widespread killing of dingoes more palatable to the public,” she said.

Dingoes have been killed in Victoria for two centuries by farming interests, particularly the sheep industry which blames them for lamb deaths. However, research by the industry’s own bodies attributes 80 per cent of the high rate of lamb mortality to farming issues and the practice of breeding for multiple births.

Various studies by the agricultural industry estimate the actual incidence of predation on lambs by dingoes is between 1% and 7% but farmers surveyed had a false perception that the rate was higher. Foxes are estimated to be responsible for 85 per cent of predation deaths of lambs.

“Rather than the sheep industry proactively addressing the 80%-plus cause of lamb losses, dingoes are demonised and given a resultant death sentence – regardless of whether they have, or ever will, kill livestock,” she said. “The millions of dollars being invested by the Andrews Government in cruel culling programs of a threatened species should instead be invested in available alternatives and further innovations that will sustain peaceful co-existence.”

Photo: A trapped dingo/Defend the Wild 

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