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Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project 21 st November 2013, Parliament House Theatre, Canberra

Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

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To see Glenn deliver this presentation, go to our Youtube site at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCIfHwoYzvo

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Page 1: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia:

Australian Feral Camel Management Project

21st November 2013, Parliament House Theatre, Canberra

Page 2: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Session One: From Science to Solution Speakers: Tom Calma, AO – Chair Ninti One Glenn Edwards – Northern Territory Government Quentin Hart – Ninti One, Australian Feral Camel Management Project Roger Smith – Chair Australian Feral Camel Management Project Steering Committee

Page 3: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Defining the feral camel problem Glenn Edwards

Page 4: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Presentation outline 1. History of camels in Australia 2. Recognition that feral camels are a problem - Early research and survey work - Camel action plan workshop - Overview of DKCRC research

Page 5: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

• First importation 1840, last importation 1907 • Domestic population peaked in 1922, size unknown~20,000 • Establishment of feral camels post 1920

1. History of camels in Australia

Mob of feral camels, Durham Downs Qld 1966

Page 6: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Early research Ecology and behaviour • Dörges and Heucke (1995,

2003) Diet, examined impacts on vegetation at different stocking rates

• Grigg et al. (1995), Edwards et al. (2001)

Movements

-

2. Recognition that feral camels are a problem

Page 7: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Early population survey work • 1969 McKnight questionnaire survey • 1980-83 Short et al. (1988) aerial SA, NT, WA

- 43,000 camels in Australia. Low precision. - WA 50%, NT 27%, SA 23%

• 1984, 1993, 2001 aerial NT only

0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005

Year

Num

ber

Page 8: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Camel action plan workshop

Alice Springs April 2005 • Debate over how many camels and whether there was a problem • Recommended development of integrated national approach to managing feral camels

Page 9: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Desert Knowledge CRC research 2006-2008

Aims

• Clarify distribution, abundance, movements and

population dynamics • Clarify key stakeholder perceptions • Evaluate impacts • Review the options available for managing these impacts • Make management recommendations

Page 10: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Key findings: population dynamics • Camels occupy 3.3M square km • Estimate of 953,000 camels in 2008 • 43% Aboriginal land, 22% pastoral land, 10%

conservation land, 25% crown land • Population doubling every 9 years

Page 11: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Key findings- perceptions Pastoral/conservation • Conservation- pest,

pastoral- pest and resource

• 84% of pastoral properties with camels engage in some form of management (mostly culling)

• Limited commercial harvest

• Woody weed control

Aboriginal • Culling seen as wasteful

but …..concerns over impacts

• Many saw camels as a resource = jobs

• Camel meat not widely utilised

• Little management undertaken (some fencing of waterholes)

• Limited commercial harvest

Page 12: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Key findings- impacts

Positive • Iconic species • Tourism • Historical perspective • Economic resource • Woody ‘weed’ control

Photos courtesy J. Brian 2005

Page 13: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Negative impacts- cultural, social (not costed)

• Road accidents

• Safety

• Disease risk

Page 14: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Negative impacts- economic • Estimated impact cost of

$7.15M annually for infrastructure damage and lost production on pastoral land alone

Page 15: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Negative impacts- environmental (not costed)

• Methane

Page 16: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

2007- large scale movement of camels onto pastoral leases and Aboriginal settlements in western deserts

Page 17: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

The relationship between the mean value of infrastructure damage reported by pastoral landholders over the period July 2005-June 2007 and the estimated mean density of feral camels on the property. Note: the figures are sample sizes. Range is standard error.

0

5

10

15

20

25

0-0.1 0.1-0.2 0.2-0.3 0.3-0.4 >0.4

Density category (camels/km2)

Dam

age

cost

($/k

m2 )

74 14

11

98

Page 18: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Key findings- management options

• Available/used – humane destruction (culling) – commercial harvest – exclusion (limited application)

• Not used, not available or not appropriate – chemical, biological, fertility control

Page 19: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

2008- the problem defined • Camels distributed over very large area (3.3M km2) • Camels very mobile and move over large areas • Camel population increasing • Camels have undesirable impacts above density of 0.1-0.2

camels/km2 • Camel density over large proportion of range (~30%) exceeds

threshold for undesirable impacts • Land owners/managers perceive a problem exists but views vary on what is best/acceptable management approach

• Market failure wrt commercial use

Page 20: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

Key findings- management recommendations

• Zoned approach taking into account density (~imacts), landholder views and aspects of different management approaches

• Address issues underpinning market failure

• Manage to long-term target density of 0.1-0.2 camels/km2 at regional scales to reduce impacts

• Incorporate key assets to allow priority setting • Cross-jurisdictional and collaborative approach to

management needed

Page 21: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions
Page 22: Glenn Edwards: 'Defining the feral camel problem'. Reducing feral camel impacts across remote Australia: Australian Feral Camel Management Project Session 1 - From science to solutions

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