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immediate use
Despite constant warnings from animal welfare groups that
kangaroos were under severe pressure from drought and commercial
killing, the Australian Government’s officially-sanctioned
slaughter for meat and skin exports has continued unabated.
The result is that populations of the main target species,
the Eastern Grey kangaroo, have crashed by 63 per cent in
just three years. Red kangaroo numbers have collapsed by
55 per cent and Wallaroos (Euros) by 54 per cent. The species
with the smallest drop is the Western Grey, the least abundant
of all the targeted species, which is down about nine per
cent.
Red kangaroo numbers have fallen from 17.5 million to under
eight million, Eastern Greys have dropped from nearly 30
million to just over 11 million and Wallaroos are down from
nearly seven million to just over three million and there
are a little over three million Western Greys left. In
real terms it means that there are now 28 million kangaroos
fewer in the areas used for commercial hunting than just
three years ago. Despite this, a further 3.9 million animals
have been earmarked for killing in 2005, a drop of only half-a-million
on 2004. This figure takes no account of the hundreds
of thousands of baby ‘Joeys’, who are either
left to die from starvation or are removed from their dead
mother’s pouches and are clubbed to death with iron
pipes.
The Kangaroo Industries Association of Australia still boats
that kangaroos are superabundant and, despite these figures,
claims that there are over 58 million kangaroos in Australia. Animal
group, Viva!, which persuaded all
1,500 large supermarkets in Britain to dump kangaroo meat
and has run a vigorous campaign against Adidas’s use
of kangaroo skin for football boots, maintains that everything
it predicted is coming to pass:
“The collapse in kangaroo numbers was inevitable once
a combination of rampant exploitation and drought came together” says
Juliet Gellatley, Viva!’s director. “The
world’s largest wildlife massacre is being justified
on the basis of so-called ‘scientific management’ programmes
in precisely the same way that fishing has been managed – and
we all know what’s happened to fish stocks! Everything
we have warned against is coming to pass and we call on Adidas,
the world’s biggest user of kangaroo skin, to drag
itself into the 21st century and put animals and ecology
before profit. And to the public – don’t
buy anything that comes from a kangaroo.”
For further information contact Juliet Gellatley
or Tony Wardle on 0117 944 1000.
Notes for Editors: Images of kangaroos
and kangaroo shooting are available from Viva!.
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