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The extinction of the Dinosaurs 65 million years ago allowed the evolution of the Mammals in the continent that is now known as Australia. For most of those 65 million years, the population and species were developed in accordance with the Darwinian principles of Natural Selection of the Fittest. Approximately 45,000 years ago the human species reached this continent. The archaeological record suggests that about this time great changes took place in the number of animal species on the continent. The large browsing fauna disappear from the record and the flora on which they had fed was replaced by other more fire-tolerant species. Opinion is divided on whether the arrival of humans caused the change in the flora and fauna or whether the changes were due to a shift in climatic conditions. Some 4,000 years ago the common Asian dog arrived in Australia. There is much disagreement over the circumstances of its arrival. Some maintain that a single pregnant bitch arrived, probably by means of an Asian fishing boat. Others argue that the dog arrived with a wave of human settlement which brought new methods of hunting and food gathering resulting is a great surge in human population numbers. As recently as 1943, biologists were considering the possibility that the Dingo had arrived in the 17th century via shipwrecked Dutch vessels on the West Australian coast. (see An Australian Animal Book, Charles Barrett, Oxford University Press Melbourne, page 102) Certainly the arrival of the first placental mammal, other than man, ended 65 million years of contained evolutionary selection in Australia. Shortly after the arrival of the dingo the Thylacine and the Tasmanian Devil disappear from the mainland. The dingo did not reach Tasmania and these two species continued to survive there for some thousands of years. Exactly how the dingo replaced the existing predators four thousand years ago is uncertain. Some are of the opinion that the dingo being a more modern and more highly evolved species was able to out compete the thylacine and the devil in the quest for prey animals. This idea is attractive but leaves much open to doubt. It presents the same kind of problem as “would the last fox kill the last rabbit”. We are of the opinion that the dingo, which has been observed to engage in cannibalism, had no hesitation in killing and eating the thylacine and devil. Because the dingo was seemingly able to exterminate the then existing carnivores, its destruction of the traditional prey of those carnivores must have been substantial. It seems that Australia is in the process of flora and fauna change as great and possibly greater than happened with the arrival of the dingo. Population growth with all its associated industry, now accompanied by climate change and the introduction of the fox and cat within the past few hundred years is having a profound effect upon the native fauna. As a means of mitigating these effects it has been proposed that the development of Wildlife Corridors of Animal Protecting Landscapes would enable populations of susceptible animals to cope with climate change by migrating to areas that will still provide the climatic conditions that they require. Definitely some species would benefit from these corridors but most of the species that are mobile enough to take advantage of the cover provided are already prone to relocate to cope with changing short term weather conditions. Others are far more devoted to a home range and their populations move only by means of a population increase colonising adjoining territory. A process far too slow to offer a protection against climate change. One species that would benefit from the proposed corridors would be the dingo. Already dingoes have been shown to cover hundreds of kilometres of country as part of a territory and the provision of safe passage along a wildlife corridor would extend these hunting territories. If we are relying on these corridors to enable smaller native species to adapt to climate change then we need to consider the effect of dingoes on any species that might be capable of using the corridors but is not capable of migrating through the existing landscape. For your consideration I have attached a recently published paper by Allen and Fleming of the University of Queensland and the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries respectively. While much of their study is on the effect of dingo predation in comparison to the effect of fox and cat predation, they do make it clear that the presence of dingoes in an environment would have a profound effect on the likelihood of any species successfully using a Wild Life Corridor as a means of extending its range into a suitable climatic zone. Looking at the corridor proposal from an economic perspective, the dingo again becomes a problem. If the wildlife corridors are established and all animals including dingoes are given free access along the length of the corridors then it is inevitable that the dingoes will stray from the confines of the corridors and prey upon domestic livestock. This is already a problem with the boundaries of National Parks and here in New South Wales, the Livestock Health and Pest Authority spends considerable sums of money each year in an effort to protect livestock from attack by dingoes. This is something that is not addressed in the Draft National Wildlife Corridors Plan but the presence of dingoes along the corridors will lead to the failure of the concept both on environmental grounds and on economic grounds. There is also a political aspect to the concept. For many years we in the Southern Tablelands of NSW have been aware of the activities of the Kosciusko to the Coast organisation. This is a rather shadowy organisation; a visit to their website leaves one none the wiser about their goals and activities. Yes, they offer details of working bees to enable city people to have a Day in the Country but the K2C organisation is about more than that. It is believed that their organiser, Lauren Van Dyke is employed by the NSW state government and that the organisation has a large working fund also provided by the state government. This fund is used to buy properties which are then subdivided and the portions sold with a covenant upon them, making them part of the Kosciusko to the Coast Corridor. Some years ago the K2C organisation was quite open about its intention to see dingoes as users of the wildlife corridor but since being challenged by the then Cooma Rural Land Protection Board there has been no mention of dingoes on their website. The policy of having sections of a wildlife corridor owned by animal-loving city people is an idea fraught with problems. Many years of farming have allowed me to watch the progress of people who seek to buy “a little piece of bush”. Initially enthusiasm brings them out from town each weekend but then over a few short years the maintenance becomes a chore until eventually nothing is done about the place and weeds and foxes and cats proliferate. Within a few years the place is sold but it is now a problem block that no part-time manager can cope with. We have heard that the Cooma Monaro Shire Weeds Inspectors are now working in accordance with a policy that does not require these part-time managers to control weeds. This policy is earning resentment from primary producers who are landed with the problem of coping with the outflow of pest animals and weed seeds from these neglected animal refuge blocks. Already there is considerable resentment towards governments, state and commonwealth, over the imposition of carbon sequestration obligations without compensation. There are suspicions now among farmers that the state government is using the power of planning decisions and building regulations to drive down the value of properties within the line of the proposed K2C corridor to enable their purchase or acquisition at a much lower price at some future date. If the concept of wildlife corridors is to have any chance of succeeding then the support and co-operation of farmers is essential. As climate change develops and as we become a more carbon-aware society the present situation of people being able to live in remote rural locations and commute to the cities for work will end and only farmers will live in the countryside. We would propose that the concept of wildlife corridors could only work with the ongoing expenditure of large sums of money to control weeds and feral animals including dingoes along the entire length of the corridors. A much more effective system for coping with climate change would entail the establishment of predator and pest free areas and the introduction and reintroduction of threatened native species into those areas. SUBMISSION from Denis Starrs