Improving Kangaroo Management: A Joint Statement

John L. Read*, George R. Wilson, Graeme Coulson, Rosie Cooney, David C. Paton, Katherine E. Moseby, Melissa A. Snape, Melanie J. Edwards

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalEditorialpeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This Statement on improving kangaroo management originates from the shared experience of many peak bodies and stakeholders that existing policy and practices related to kangaroo management cause perverse outcomes for animal welfare, conservation, productivity, waste, drought resilience, climate, and the health, culture and wellbeing of Australians. The Statement was developed in consultation with delegates from two kangaroo symposia in 2019, and broadened through contributions from other ecological, Aboriginal, animal welfare and conservation stakeholders who believe reform is necessary. Positive change across all these domains requires an empathetic, science-based collaborative and coordinated approach to improve management of kangaroos in Australia, which in turn requires building a broad social mandate for reform. This manuscript presents the drivers and definitions for the Statement and key references documenting the causes and recommended solutions for improving kangaroo management, including many of the papers in this volume. An extensive inventory of conservation, agricultural, animal welfare, indigenous and scientific organisations that have endorsed the Statement is provided. We aim to inform public opinions and drive necessary change to policy, attitude and actions to appropriately value, conserve and utilise kangaroos where there is a tendency for overpopulation. Recommendations include development of a National Kangaroo Strategy that includes discussion on whether overabundant kangaroos are a legitimate sustainable resource that should be managed as such rather than being largely wasted as the by-product of pest control to protect other industries or conservation landuses.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)186-192
Number of pages7
JournalEcological Management and Restoration
Volume22
Issue numberS1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2021

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