Hungarian: Indigenous buffalo species are endangered

Published 2020년 12월 27일

Tridge summary

The wild buffalo population in northern Australia has surged by 26,000 in the past year, reaching 187,000, as reported by the Regional Natural Resources Management Authority (TNRM). This growth poses a significant threat to native species due to the disruption of their habitats, including catchment pits and swamps. The situation arose as landowners have ceased killing buffaloes, instead opting to profit from them, contributing to the uncontrollable population growth. Despite efforts such as exports and slaughter within Australia, the numbers continue to escalate, outpacing the sector's ability to manage, with the problem worsening since 2014 due to reduced mass killings.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The buffalo population in northern Australia has grown so much that experts say it is already endangering native species. According to a survey conducted by the Natural Resources Management Authority of the region (TNRM), the number of wild buffalo in the Northern Area has increased by 26,000, or 17 percent, in the last 12 months, bringing the population to 187,000. More and more landowners are choosing not to kill wild buffaloes, but rather try to reap business benefits from them, hoping for a recovery in buffalo meat exports. Agricultural scientist Susanne Casanova, an official at the TNRM project, highlighted that the buffalo herd has been growing for a long time and that it no longer seems possible to keep up with this, making the problem unmanageable. The population of wild buffaloes has been growing since 2014, when indigenous landowners began to keep the herd more because mass killing of animals by air cost them too much. This year, nine thousand buffaloes were exported ...
Source: Agroinform

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