Environmental protection is set for a shake-up as the federal government launches a new threatened species strategy in a fresh approach to boosting populations and stopping threatened species disappearing from the planet in the wake of the Black Summer bushfires.
Environment Minister Sussan Ley launched the 10-year threatened species strategy on Friday, which she said was needed to address an “enormous threat” to wildlife coming from a combination of “our human footprint, feral pests and weeds, our changing climate and biosecurity hazards”.
The inaugural threatened species strategy, launched in 2015 by former environment minister Greg Hunt, focused on emergency intervention like breeding programs for endangered plants and animals, establishing safe havens free from pests or weeds, and a program to cull feral cats which prey on native marsupials.
Ms Ley said, “The new strategy identifies both species and ‘places’, with an expanded focus on the protection of a more diverse range of species, including reptiles, amphibians, freshwater species, marine species and all of the incredibly unique environments in which they are found.”
The new strategy was backed by $57 million funding for threatened species in the federal budget and is expected to identify and set recovery targets for up to 100 priority species and 20 places and include a new focus on marine wildlife.
Priority species for protection will be selected under six principles: cost, uniqueness of plants and animals, risk of extinction, conservation investment that delivers benefits to multiple species, the cultural significance of species, and “representativeness” of species so conservation targets are selected across a range of species and bioregions.
The federal government’s previous conservation plans haven’t planned for big climate shocks from fires, droughts and storms. But extra elements will be added to the new strategy including a focus on preparedness for natural disasters, which are becoming more severe and frequent with climate change.
Bushfires that swept across Queensland, NSW, and Victoria in the summer of 2019-20 killed billions of animals and left 113 animal species in need of urgent support.