Nuts wrote:Vegans are rather bland, can I have bbq sauce on mine?
Earthling wrote:The easiest to control on large properties in marginal sheep/cattle regions is water. Using an electronic device and tagging stock which then opens and shuts a vermin proof gate at a water source will stop ferals and other ‘pests’ (roos, dingoes…) having access to one of the main reasons why they live there – man-made water points. Also filling all dams on properties that have gone from livestock to solely grain production would also be of assistance.
For all those hunters and killers who are soooo concerned about the environment that they are putting their own precious time and money into hunting and killing animals, there are actually much bigger things you can do that will greatly assist the environment than the 1% per annum feral reduction. Something that will cost you less both in time and money. Something that will reduce your Greenhouse methane gas emissions by 28+%. Will allow less land to be needed for agriculture destroying practices, hence helping the environment even more and be healthier for you. Go vegan![]()
maddog wrote:Earthling,
I would have thought that removing habitat and water from pests, would have a significant impact on non-target species (including the rare and endangered), something that a well-targeted shooting / baiting program would not have. Also, my understanding is that the intensive horticultural activities (i.e. monocultures with the implicit addition of fertiliser, herbicides, and pesticides) that would be necessary if the human population of the world were to adopt a pure vegan diet is of far greater environmental impact (in terms of habitat destruction and exclusive use of land area) than grazing animals. Is this incorrect?
Earthling wrote:Taking into consideration the main reason for the obesity epidemic throughout the westernised world is eating too much protein/meat,
Son of a Beach wrote:Go vegan. Or go hunting. That way you still get your meat without modifying the environment much. And according to most of the reading in this topic (and others), and in my own experience, this ends up having little to no impact on the population of the animals being hunted. (Of course I'm sure that would change if everybody was out hunting their own meat).
Dale wrote:[Thread drift.]Earthling wrote:Taking into consideration the main reason for the obesity epidemic throughout the westernised world is eating too much protein/meat,
Keen to see the sources on this Earthling. I was under the impression the obesity epidemic was a result of sedentary lifestyle and excessive refined carbohydrates and sugar.
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Earthling wrote:...The easiest to control on large properties in marginal sheep/cattle regions is water. Using an electronic device and tagging stock which then opens and shuts a vermin proof gate at a water source will stop ferals and other ‘pests’ (roos, dingoes…) having access to one of the main reasons why they live there – man-made water points. Also filling all dams on properties that have gone from livestock to solely grain production would also be of assistance.
maddog wrote: Earthling ...This river would require many hundreds of kilometres of high quality fencing (similar to that of the rabbit proof fence on the NSW / Qld border) in order to keep pests away. Each time there was a flood (every 2-3 years) it would require extensive repairs or replacement, not just a few batteries.
maddog wrote: ...I also understand that, thanks to modern farming techniques (fertiliser, machinery, etc), we are able to produce more food on less land - leaving more available for conservation purposes.
Dale wrote:[Thread drift.]Earthling wrote:Taking into consideration the main reason for the obesity epidemic throughout the westernised world is eating too much protein/meat,
Keen to see the sources on this Earthling. I was under the impression the obesity epidemic was a result of sedentary lifestyle and excessive refined carbohydrates and sugar.
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maddog wrote:Pteropus,
The potential to increase area under agriculture is undoubted, the reality is that it is not happening - the World Bank figures make this clear. The net area required for agriculture around the world will not increase, because there is no need (as we now get more from less and will continue to do so into the future). I agree that the main land management problem is in the Third World, but this will change as they improve their practices and their living standards rise (it has everywhere else).
As for trends in global populations of threatened species, these things are difficult to reliably measure, and subject to political manipulation and misrepresentation. but it should be remembered that most extinctions have Darwinian causes not anthropogenic ones (threatened species are not amongst the fittest). So preserve them when we can, but we too will all be dead in the long run.
Cheers
Earthling wrote:However, one of the reasons why we have more native kangaroos and dingoes in many marginal farming areas is because we have provided water for them. This works across much of Australia and has severe implications for many smaller animals. Animals that adapted to periods of drought and dry conditions where large predators such as dingoes with higher water needs could not live, now have dingoes to contend with as of farmers water points.
Earthling wrote: Maddog, as can be seen I didnt mention anything about fencing rivers, lakes etc, just water provided by farmers. Also I did not mention all of Australia, but much of Australia, meaning marginal land as thats the areas I was talking about.
Earthling wrote: The degree it did not work is that kangaroos and dingoes will move from a neighbouring property onto the property with fenced man-made water sources. So the failure was the area on trial was not bigger than the target animals range. Remember I am not wanting to totally eradicate all kangaroos or dingoes as you are infering with the fence everything interpretation. This would eradicate emus, wallabies, numbats etc...not exactly an ideal in my book.
maddog wrote:I concede that it is possible your idea may work as part of an integrated pest management approach, but by itself is unlikely to be effective unless implemented at anything less than a grand scale.
As to inferring that you wanted to eradicate all kangaroos or dingos, this is incorrect. I was thinking that you did not want to eradicate anything, and see your water / habitat deprival strategy as a humane method of pest control (relocation), consistent with your vegan ethic.
Earthling wrote:I too feel the only way it would work would be on a large scale, just as 'professional' shooting and 1080 baiting is done on a grand scale.
colinm wrote:There are no vegetarians - just selective anorexics.
maddog wrote:Earthling, If you believe your scheme is worthy of a grand scale, perhaps you could share your ideas on how to mitigate the effect of widespread water deprivation and habitat destruction on non-target species, that is implicit in your scheme?
Earthling wrote:maddog wrote:Earthling, If you believe your scheme is worthy of a grand scale, perhaps you could share your ideas on how to mitigate the effect of widespread water deprivation and habitat destruction on non-target species, that is implicit in your scheme?
Could you add some depth to your percieved problems?...your not giving much at all to work on...
Earthling wrote:The easiest to control on large properties in marginal sheep/cattle regions is water. Using an electronic device and tagging stock which then opens and shuts a vermin proof gate at a water source will stop ferals and other ‘pests’ (roos, dingoes…) having access to one of the main reasons why they live there...
Earthling wrote:Removing water yes your correct, it will target non-target species...
Earthling wrote:The degree it did not work is that kangaroos and dingoes will move from a neighbouring property onto the property with fenced man-made water sources. So the failure was the area on trial was not bigger than the target animals range
Nuts wrote:I can drive past (publicly funded) fenced re-vegetated sites that were reverted to lambing paddocks as soon as we left, gates put in, reveg not followed up, trees left to die over the summer. (For those in Tassie take a look at the 'green *& gold' landcare model site ( the creek leading back from the midlands highway to the Jericho village) as an example..000's of trees were planted there!)...Some of the concept of these projects undertaken on 'grand scale' may be noble but the reality & process certainly isn't.
maddog wrote:Given that you have recognised that your grand scheme is not viable unless all potential water sources are to be secured with expensive fence networks covering large tracts of land, how do you fence water off from animals that you deem to be pests and wish to deprive of water, and not the animals that you view as desirable and wish to allow access to water. Ear-tags and gates for bandicoots as well as cattle?
Earthling wrote:Earthling wrote:However, one of the reasons why we have more native kangaroos and dingoes in many marginal farming areas is because we have provided water for them. This works across much of Australia and has severe implications for many smaller animals. Animals that adapted to periods of drought and dry conditions where large predators such as dingoes with higher water needs could not live, now have dingoes to contend with as of farmers water points.
Maddog, as can be seen I didnt mention anything about fencing rivers, lakes etc, just water provided by farmers. Also I did not mention all of Australia, but much of Australia, meaning marginal land as thats the areas I was talking about.
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