Well, there's in excess of a million camels in Australia, wandering around various isolated outback locations and they are doing significant environmental and infrastructure damage. We estimate the infrastructure damage to be in the vicinity of 14 million a year.
Wherever they go, feral camels leave a trail of destruction, with fences knocked down, waterholesfouled and vegetation stripped bare. Ferguson says camels are quite choosy about what they eat, preferring bush fruits over plain grass. If the population is not radically diminished, it's thought that the camels could permanently destroy Australia's delicate desertecosystem.
The Australian government is preparing for a camel control program which is now in the planning stages. Cattle ranchers have long been at odds with the roaming camels, which are viewed as competition for grazing areas. About 25,000 camels are killed each year here, and much of theculling is carried out by marksmen in helicopters and on the ground.
And I suppose with the numbers being so high, any that you take off is an improvement to what's already there.
That can't control a population that's exploding.
In South Australia alone we have 200,000 feral camels. That number is projected to double in the next 10 years. The damage they cause to, well, the environment is extraordinary.
The long-term aim is to reduce the camel population by as much as two thirds. It seems the camels, once indispensable in building the outback's infrastructure and delivering supplies, have overstayed their welcome.