Feral deer are a pest. So list them as one.

Feral deer are a pest. So list them as one.

Feral deer devour over a million tonnes of native mosses, ferns, grasses, shrubs, bark, branches and leaves in a year – all critical habitat for our native animals.

Even trees we once thought were untouchable, such as East Gippsland’s beautiful Kurrajongs, are seriously threatened by deer, which destroy any young plants and emerging seedlings.

Yet the government still hasn’t released its long-promised deer management strategy. And crucially – it hasn’t listed deer as a pest animal, even though every other mainland state has.

The good news is that a group of eminent scientists, industry and community leaders have outlined ...

Feral deer devour over a million tonnes of native mosses, ferns, grasses, shrubs, bark, branches and leaves in a year – all critical habitat for our native animals.

Even trees we once thought were untouchable, such as East Gippsland’s beautiful Kurrajongs, are seriously threatened by deer, which destroy any young plants and emerging seedlings.

Yet the government still hasn’t released its long-promised deer management strategy. And crucially – it hasn’t listed deer as a pest animal, even though every other mainland state has.

The good news is that a group of eminent scientists, industry and community leaders have outlined a deer control plan that would go a long way to restoring our state’s rainforests, wetlands and grasslands, and reduce the damage feral deer have on local businesses and homes.

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Ministers: List feral deer as a pest animal now

Feral deer destroy shrubs, ringbark trees, trample rainforests, wallow in wetlands, wreck orchards and vineyards, and they’re a hazard on our roads. 

Ask your ministers to protect wildlife, parks, local businesses and communities by urgently listing deer as a pest animal and releasing an effective, well-resourced deer control plan.

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