Credit: Matt Lovenfosse via Storyful
First fires, now flood and plagues from spiders, mice and locusts - it's been a terrible year for Australia's wildlife and livestock that are now trying to survive the rainfall pummelling New South Wales. Reports of spiders swarming by residents' homes to reach higher ground have spread on social media but animals are struggling across eastern Australia. In the worst flooding in decades, close to a metre of rain has fallen in some parts of New South Wales and more is forecast to come, forcing thousands of people to evacuate. From a farm in Kinchela Creek, one man posted an image of thousands of spiders running across a muddy field.
"All the brown you can see is spiders trying to beat the floodwater," Matt Lovenfosse wrote on Facebook, adding that he expected them to soon be inside his house. In Macksville, Melanie Williams watched as "thousands" of spiders scaled the fence of her back yard, she told ABC news. "As the water was rising, the letterbox was going under further and further and I could see all these little black things on there and I thought 'oh my God, they're spiders'," she said. An expert told ABC that, like people and animals, the insects were trying to seek safety on higher ground. "What happens with the floods is all these animals that spend their lives cryptically on the ground can't live there anymore," explained Professor Dieter Hochuli from Sydney University.
Credit BoM
But there have been some heroic stories of animal rescue just months after wildfires killed or harmed an estimated three billion animals. In Sydney, a wallaby and a number of birds belonging to Paul Zammit were rescued by his best friend when his house flooded. "All of the animals survived, but they are soaked," Mr Zammit explained. On Monday emergency workers in boats rescued 20 dogs from a kennel threatened by rising water in a Sydney suburb. Their owners had left them at the kennel when they were told to evacuate but the flooding had spread, the kennel owner told Reuters news agency. Livestock in farms or pasture has been trapped as rivers burst their banks or fields saturated with rainwater turned to mud. "There were cows that were up to their head in the water," one farmer close to Port Macquarie told the Guardian newspaper.
Credit DW News
Gavin Saul lost 85 cows in the floodwater, explaining: "They wouldn't swim and were heading for these trees and got all tangled in the vines." Eventually, a boat arrived with help and Mr Saul managed to free 11 cows and two calves. And in Taree, members of a surfing club rescued a cow from breakwaters on the beach and transferred her into a paddock, wrote one woman on Twitter. But there are some creatures that communities are not as keen to save. Residents of Gilgandra are hoping the rain will drive out the "mouse plague" that has infested their small town with thousands of rodents in recent weeks.
ABC AustraliaBaiting to control numbers
"All we can do is start putting baits up in the ceiling, and do a lot of manual baiting around the outside of the house and sheds to try and control the numbers," Mr Hearn said. "Our neighbours have some rice crops in and they're about to be harvested, so the water will be drained, and once the water comes off, there's really nothing protecting those crops. "One positive is the rain and the cold wind does usually takes care of them when they're in plague numbers." Victorian Farmers Federation grains group president Ashley Fraser lives in Rutherglen in northern Victoria and has heard a number of reports of mice on farms.
Populations worsen in New South Wales
Deniliquin agronomist Adam Dellwo said mice numbers in the southern Riverina had been building since Christmas and were still a problem for growers. "They are becoming more and more widespread, we are certainly not dealing with the plagues and the big numbers the growers in the north are, but people have certainly started baiting around here," Mr Dellwo said. He said growers were baiting in summer crops including rice, corn and cotton. "People are being very vigilant as numbers are building in paddocks, they are venturing into offices, houses and everywhere else," Mr Dellwo said. He said mice were a major concern plaguing growers currently — who have both winter sowing and summer harvest looming. "We are concerned what this means for establishing winter crops which will be sown soon, and no more damage in summer crops would be nice too."
4 comments:
Completely livable1 NASA satellite data shows vegetation, forestation steadily increasing!
My environment is comfortable and healthy!
According to NASA...
When are we going to hold weather manipulating countries accountable for the devastation they cause?
When will the world wake to the global weather manipulation that has been happening for the last several decades? They are progressing, unimpeded, to secure full control via global climate change. They need to push carbon tax, they create more storms and make those naturally occurring stronger.
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