中文字幕网伦射乱中文-超清中文乱码字幕在线观看-亚洲v国产v欧美v久久久久久-久久性网-手机在线成人av-成人六区-国产人与zoxxxx另类一一-青青草国产久久精品-蜜桃av久久久一区二区三区麻豆-成人av一区二区免费播放-在线视频麻豆-www爱爱-成人免费看片视频-性欧美老肥妇喷水-五月99久久婷婷国产综合亚洲-亚洲最色-各种含道具高h调教1v1男男-91丨porny丨国产-国产精品无码专区在线观看不卡-大香伊人

Iconic Australian national park "decimated" by invasive toads: expert

Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-20 10:25:30|Editor: Xiaoxia
Video PlayerClose

CANBERRA, Feb. 20 (Xinhua) -- Biodiversity in Australia's iconic Kakadu National Park has been "decimated" by invasive cane toads, a leading expert has warned.

Cane toads were introduced to Australia to eradicate sugar cane beetles in Queensland in the 1930s. They have since spread across northern Australia, devouring crops and depleting native fauna populations.

They first appeared in Kakadu, a 19,804 square kilometer protected area of the Northern Territory (NT), in the early 2000s.

Graeme Sawyer, a toad expert who served as Lord Mayor of Darwin, the NT's capital city, between 2008 and 2012, said he has witnessed the impact of the toads on Kakadu's native species.

"In eight or so trips into that country including lots of walking around at night, we never saw an olive python or a water python, we saw about two slatey grey snakes, and nothing else in the reptile species," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).

"No goannas, none of the people who live there had seen a goanna for like seven years, when they used to eat them on a regular basis."

"The collapse of those systems, and when you look at the numbers of toads and where they are, and you map that up with some of the biodiversity stuff, it's awful."

Earlier in February, Sawyer told a parliamentary inquiry into controlling cane toads that the "devastation on the wildlife out (in Kakadu) is something you have to see to believe", accusing the government of having "its head in the sand" in dealing with the issue.

"The impact of toads 15 to 20 years in is unbelievable," he told the inquiry.

Australia's cane toad population has grown from the 102 introduced in 1935 to hundreds of millions and the pests are moving west across the continent at a pace of between 50 and 60 kilometers every year.

Widely considered the most devastating pests introduced to Australia, the toads have no natural predators on account of their poison killing any animal that eats one.

"In the late dry season there are thousands of cane toads," Sawyer told the ABC.

Anthony Simms, Kakadu's biodiversity manager, said there "is no way of effectively managing toads."

"It is a complete and utter waste of time," he said.

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001378360871