After a severe population decline, Australia has specified the koalas as an endangered species across most of its east coast. Land clearing, bushfires, drought, illness, and other hazards have decimated the once-thriving marsupial. The listing was for Queensland, New South Wales, and the Australian Capital Territory. More efforts are necessary to safeguard koalas from habitat loss and climate change.
In 2012, those states and territories determined species “vulnerable.” Governments have been indicted of dithering, despite the quick deterioration.
“The impact of prolonged drought, followed by the black summer bushfires, and the cumulative impacts of disease, urbanization, and habitat loss over the past twenty years have led to the advice,” Environment Minister Sussan Ley said in a statement on Friday.
Despite significant population tolls across the country, conservationists have long called for increased support for the koala.
Koalas: Vulnerable to endangered within a decade
An analysis inferred population losses of roughly 50% in Queensland since 2001 and 62 percent in New South Wales. WWF-Australia, the International Fund for Animal Welfare, and Humane Society International all suggested the listing to the government in April 2020. Koalas will become extinct in New South Wales by 2050, according to a report released last year.
The Black Summer bushfires of 2019-20 killed 5,000 koalas and destroyed 24% of habitats in New South Wales alone. Australia’s largest Koala conservation group determines the wild population of the animals may be as poor as 50,000.
Climate modifications will worsen bushfires and drought. They will also diminish the disposition of the animal’s eucalyptus leaf diet.
“Koalas have gone from no-listing to vulnerable to endangered within a decade. That is a shockingly fast decline,” said conservation scientist Stuart Blanch from WWF-Australia.
Koalas are also present in South Australia and Victoria. But conservation groups contend that their numbers are dwindling across the country.