The ferals that ate Australia / Guy Hull.

By: Hull, Guy [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Sydney, N.S.W. : ABC Books, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Description: 312 pages ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780733341762; 0733341764Subject(s): Feral animals -- Australia -- History | Pests -- Australia -- History | Pests -- Control -- Australia -- History | Nonindigenous pests -- Australia -- History | Nonindigenous pests -- Control -- Australia -- History | Introduced animals -- Australia -- History | Nature conservation -- Australia | Wildlife conservation -- AustraliaDDC classification: 591.620994 Summary: Isolation was once the impenetrable barrier that protected Australia and its unique fauna. But a little over two hundred years ago a foreign power took possession and brought with it the foreign animals that now dominate the country's ecosystem. They are the enemy within. Since that time, around 10 per cent of Australia's endemic terrestrial mammalian species have become extinct. Today Australia is dealing with the damage caused by all hard-hoofed animals, domestic and feral. Yet the bigger feral story is the ravages of acclimatisation, caused as new settlers tried to make the colony more like their homeland and released the rabbit, the fox, the hare, feral cats, common mynas, starlings, sparrows, redfin perch, and the many other invasive species that have brought native Australia to its knees. In this book, Guy Hull details the history and toll of the numerous animal species that have contributed to the decimation of Australian species, their assault on land and agriculture, and the modern strategies that are - hopefully - reclaiming the country for our native fauna and its human population.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Adult Nonfiction
591 .62099 4 HUL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111082174242

"Dangerous predators and ravenous herbivores: the story of Australia's feral nightmare"--Cover.

Includes bibliographical references.

Isolation was once the impenetrable barrier that protected Australia and its unique fauna. But a little over two hundred years ago a foreign power took possession and brought with it the foreign animals that now dominate the country's ecosystem. They are the enemy within. Since that time, around 10 per cent of Australia's endemic terrestrial mammalian species have become extinct. Today Australia is dealing with the damage caused by all hard-hoofed animals, domestic and feral. Yet the bigger feral story is the ravages of acclimatisation, caused as new settlers tried to make the colony more like their homeland and released the rabbit, the fox, the hare, feral cats, common mynas, starlings, sparrows, redfin perch, and the many other invasive species that have brought native Australia to its knees. In this book, Guy Hull details the history and toll of the numerous animal species that have contributed to the decimation of Australian species, their assault on land and agriculture, and the modern strategies that are - hopefully - reclaiming the country for our native fauna and its human population.

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