-
Stocks mark time ahead of Fed decision
-
Hollywood meets the world in Sundance line-up
-
Veggie 'burgers' remain on table as EU talks stall
-
French far right sparks debate with proposal to reopen brothels
-
Not lovin' it: McDonald's pulls Dutch AI Christmas ad
-
Earliest evidence of humans making fire discovered in UK
-
Evenepoel to share Red Bull lead with Lipowitz at Tour de France
-
Austrian court rejects Ukraine tycoon's US extradition
-
Instagram users given new algorithm controls
-
M23's advance in DR Congo prompts uncertainty, border closure
-
'Downward spiral': French mother blames social media for teen's suicide
-
US Fed expected to make third straight rate cut despite divisions
-
Daughter of Venezuela's Machado picks up Nobel peace prize in her absence
-
NFL to play regular season games in Munich in 2026 and 2028
-
Tens of thousands petition against Croatia Catholic men's public prayers
-
EU seeks better Spain-France energy links after blackout
-
French special forces helped Benin after attempted coup: military
-
Madeleine McCann's father says 'lucky' to survive media attention
-
Sabalenka says transgender women in WTA events 'not fair'
-
Gerrard urges Salah to stay at Liverpool and 'reverse away' from outburst
-
Greek govt in emergency meeting as farmers block central port
-
China consumer prices pick up pace but demand still slack
-
Venezuela's Machado 'safe' but will miss Nobel Peace Prize ceremony
-
All Black wing Reece signs for French side Perpignan
-
Louvre thieves escaped with 30 seconds to spare, probe reveals
-
Stocks retreat ahead of Fed decision
-
Not just pizza: Italian cuisine makes UNESCO list
-
Spurs' Simons wants to 'build legacy' as he succeeds Son
-
Egypt switches off Liverpool after Salah fallout
-
Europe ministers meet on migration 'challenges' to rights convention
-
Real-life horror to TV drama: Feared Syria sites become sets for series
-
France's 'Battery Valley' makes use of Asian experts
-
Stocks in retreat as traders eye Fed decision, tech earnings
-
Egypt teammates rally behind unsettled Salah before AFCON
-
Moo dunnit? Dog lets bull, horse into living room in Australia
-
Venezuela opposition chief Machado to miss Nobel Peace Prize award
-
Indian festival of lights Diwali joins UNESCO heritage list
-
Brazil lawmakers approve bill to cut Bolsonaro sentence after ruckus
-
New Zealand lose Tickner as West Indies all out for 205
-
China surplus pushing EU to take 'offensive' trade measures: business lobby
-
Japanese ivory trade attracts fresh global scrutiny
-
Tickner rushed to hospital as New Zealand bowl out West Indies for 205
-
Cambodia-Thailand border clashes send half a million into shelters
-
Cambodia pull out of SEA Games in Thailand over border conflict
-
Orlando to face New York in NBA Cup semis at Vegas
-
Cambodia pull out of SEA Games in Thailand: organisers
-
Australian mum of late teen says social media ban 'bittersweet'
-
Oil-rich UAE turns to AI to grease economy
-
West Indies 175-4 after Tickner takes three in second New Zealand Test
-
Nepal faces economic fallout of September protest
| NGG | -0.57% | 74.465 | $ | |
| RBGPF | -1.96% | 77.68 | $ | |
| CMSC | -0.35% | 23.159 | $ | |
| RYCEF | -1.58% | 14.6 | $ | |
| GSK | 1.6% | 48.039 | $ | |
| RIO | 1.05% | 75.191 | $ | |
| BP | -0.01% | 35.545 | $ | |
| RELX | 1.06% | 39.965 | $ | |
| BTI | 2.1% | 58.52 | $ | |
| VOD | 0.4% | 12.55 | $ | |
| JRI | -0.06% | 13.693 | $ | |
| BCC | 3.39% | 74.53 | $ | |
| CMSD | -0.39% | 23.13 | $ | |
| BCE | 0.34% | 23.23 | $ | |
| AZN | 0.71% | 90.46 | $ | |
| SCS | 0.12% | 16.14 | $ |
Australia told to shoot kangaroos before they starve
Australia's kangaroos could die in "catastrophic" numbers if a population boom is left unchecked, ecologists have warned, while backing the industrial-scale culling of the marsupials.
To outsiders, the kangaroo is an instantly-recognisable symbol of the Australian wilderness, but within the country the native animal poses a major environmental headache.
Kangaroos have a "boom and bust" population cycle -- when fodder is plentiful on the back of a good wet season their numbers can balloon by tens of millions.
Hopping mobs of kangaroos can rapidly strip paddocks bare, but ecologist Katherine Moseby warned they would starve to death in droves when food ran out.
"The last drought we estimated that 80 or 90 percent of the kangaroos in some areas died," she told AFP.
"They are starving to death -- going into public toilets and eating toilet paper, or lying on the road starving while their joeys are trying to feed," she added, referring to events from the last population boom.
Moseby said the kindest way to save kangaroos from this fate was to shoot them, and harvest the meat, as a way of keeping numbers in check.
"It keeps the numbers down so that when we do get drought we don't get these welfare issues," she said.
"If we saw them as a resource and managed them like that, we wouldn't get the catastrophic deaths that we see."
Kangaroos are protected in Australia but the most common species are not endangered -- this means they can be shot and killed in most jurisdictions, but government permission is needed.
Each year, as many as five million kangaroos are shot as part of a homegrown industry, which harvests their carcasses for meat, pet food and leather.
Dennis King from the Kangaroo Industry Association of Australia believes the country is on the cusp of another kangaroo boom.
"After three years of La Nina right down the east coast, we've seen the perfect growth scenario for kangaroos over the next couple of years," he told AFP.
"The breeding cycle really speeds up."
King said the national kangaroo population fell under 30 million following a crippling drought in the early 2000s, but could soon rebound to as many as 60 million.
- 'Cruel slaughter' -
Animal rights activists have denounced the commercial cull as a "cruel slaughter", pressuring global sportswear giants such as Nike and Puma to phase out the use of kangaroo leather.
"Nike divested of its only kangaroo leather supplier in 2021 and will stop making any product with kangaroo leather in 2023," a spokeswoman for the company said in March.
Politicians in Oregon, where Nike was founded, introduced a bill earlier this year that would outlaw the use of "any part of a dead kangaroo".
"These native animals are slaughtered for the sake of commercial profit," Animals Australia said earlier this year.
George Wilson, a leading researcher on kangaroo management, said attempts to shut down the industry were well-intentioned but ultimately misguided.
"They say it's unethical, but it's unethical to let them starve to death," he told AFP.
"The cruelty is not doing anything about it."
Moseby agreed, saying ending the culling of kangaroos would actually be more cruel in the long run.
"Trying to stop the harvest of leather or meat, it's not going to have any welfare benefit," she said.
"It's going to make it worse."
W.Moreno--AT