Koalas

The JoJo

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What's this I hear about koalas being almost extinct on the west coast of Australia? Heard it on the radio. Their natural habitat getting wiped out, due to roads, buildings etc....

They said another ten years and that part of the country would be left without them....?
 

sechs

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Yes, and people here are surprised the mountain lions and bobcats keep showing up in their neighborhoods...
 

The JoJo

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Hmmm, I thought the koalas would have been spread out on a wider area.

10 years seems like a pretty short time!

What did the orangutangs have, another 25 years before their habitat was gone?

Boy are we good at destroying the nature :(
 

Splash

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Tea said:
When you cut all the trees down to build McDonalds stores, all the wild creatures die...

Unless McDonald'z hires those koalas first. Then they got a job so that they can rent out a tree to live in and eat from. By the way, Koalas can slash you bad. Then there are the cute wombats.
 

sechs

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They won't let the koalas disappear. They're too much of a symbol of Australia.

On the other hand, they may be dependent upon us for their survival -- forever.
 

The JoJo

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sechs said:
On the other hand, they may be dependent upon us for their survival -- forever.

Oh boy, are they in trouble. Sound like "stuck in the zoo forever" to me.
I'm afraid you might be right.

I remember an episode on TV abuot elephants, where people where hunting and shooting them in Africa because there were too many elephants, compared to the food available. Too bad they didn't realize the amount of elephants we're related to the amount of food. Bad year, decrease of elephants, good years, increace in elephant population. No need to interfere. They die just like the rest of us.
 

sechs

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The issue with natural populations is that, if done correctly, we (human beings) can take those animals which would die and profit from it. This kind of management could work, if we ever could figure out how to do it.

In the mean time, people are managing with their adrenal glands, rather than their heads.
 

Tea

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Oh there is no question of extinction. Koalas, or Tree Rabbits, as I've taken to terming them lately, still have large areas of habitat remaining and there is no real likelihood that they will lose the bulk of it. We are only talking about the east coast, where most of the people live.

There are many other species, however, which are not in the same lucky situation. The natural range of the Koala is vast, and they are a common animal. Many others have a more restricted, specialised habital and much smaller natural range. This is where the real problems lie. Just to mention a few obvious ones off the top of my head (and sticking to mamals, ignoring birds, reptiles, and plants for the moment):

* All bandicoot species except one or two in the north (where foxes are rare).
* The Bilby. (The Lesser Bilby is already gone.)
* About half a dozen species of those astonishingly beautiful hopping mice.
* Several macropod species (the group that includes the kangaroos and wallabies)
* Worst case of all is the carnivores: there are about 50 native carnivores. The only really well-known one is the Thylacine (which is extinct already, of course), the others range down through easy stages to about half the size of a mouse. Some of them are doing OK, the majority are in trouble.
* The marsupial moles of the vast western deserts. Very little is known about them and sightings are rare events indeed - typically years apart.
* Finally, the closest relatives of the Koala, the wombats. The Common Wombat is OK, much reduced in range asnd extinct in large areas, but doing OK in the east of Victoria. The Southern Hairy-nose Wombat is struggling and seriously threatened by global climate change; while the Northern Hairy-nose Wombat is down to one single colony in Queensland. It's the rarest and most endangered large mammal in the world.

But stupid Koalas get the headlines.

Sigh.
 

Pradeep

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Koalas. They smell. And most have gonorreah (sp).

Wombat is not a good thing to hit with a vehicle. It's like hitting a large boulder. They are very solid beasts. I was chased by one on a dirt road in the dark once (I was on foot at the time).
 

Tea

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Actually, it's clamidia. (more sp?) The population has dropped a lot in recent years because of the clamidia epidemic. But the reality is, they are still plentiful, and as Pradeep says, they don't always smell nice. There are other creatures that are much more threatened.
 

mubs

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chla·myd·i·a

chla·myd·i·a [klə míddee ə]
(plural chla·myd·i·as)
n

1. MICROBIOLOGY pathogenic bacterium: a spherical bacterium that causes several eye and urogenital diseases in humans and other animals, and psittacosis in pet birds.
Genus: Chlamydia

2. MED sexually transmitted disease: a sexually transmitted disease, the most common in developed countries, caused by the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis.
Often producing no symptoms, it can cause infertility, chronic pain, or a tubal pregnancy if left untreated.

[Mid-20th century. Via modern Latin from Greek khlamyd- , stem of khlamus “mantle, chlamys.”]

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