2 minute read
Australia declares struggling koalas an endangered species
New classi cation won’t force changes
By Manan Luthra
The New York Times
»
SYDNEY
The Australian government on Friday declared the koala an endangered species, as drought, bush fires, disease and habitat loss have drastically reduced the numbers of an animal that is an emblem of the country’s unique wildlife.
The announcement, by the country’s environment minister, came two years after a parliamentary inquiry predicted that koalas could be extinct by 2050 without urgent government intervention.
Reclassification from vulnerable to endangered does not require the Australian government to take any special action. But it separately announced that it would adopt a recovery plan for the koala issued by the country’s environmental department.
That plan would aid the creation of laws protecting koalas and their natural woodland habitats. Additionally, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced last month that the government would commit 50 million Australian dollars ($35.7 million) over four years to koala recovery and conservation e orts.
The plight of the koala gained global attention in 2019 when bush fires raged over millions of acres in Australia, blackening the animal’s habitats. A report commissioned by the World Wildlife Fund-Australia estimated that 60,000 koalas had been “killed, injured or a ected in some way.”
A rescued koala in Adelaide, Australia, in January 2018.
Years of drought, res and habitat loss have drastically reduced the population of the iconic marsupial.
In response, the Australian government committed 18 million Australian dollars ($12.8 million) to be split between restoring the koala’s habitats and investing in koala health research.
In 2020, WWF-Australia, the International Fund for Animal Welfare and the Humane Society International collectively nominated the animal for listing as an endangered species. The groups found that koala populations in
News of the weird
People with issues
“All I wanted was some steak,” one customer was heard to say in a video of a brawl that broke out at a Golden Corral in Bensalem, Pennsylvania, on Jan. 28, CBS Philly reported. Employee Gaven Lauletta gave his account of the incident: “There was a shortage of steak and two parties were involved and one family cut in front of another family; they were taking their time and they ran out of steak and it got into a heated exchange at the tables,” he said. — Send items to WeirdNewsTips@amuniversal.com.
1909
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was founded in 1909.
1973
Operation Homecoming began as the rst release of American prisoners of war from the Vietnam War took place.
1999
The Senate voted to acquit President Bill Clinton of perjury and obstruction of justice.
2006
the states of Queensland and New South Wales had decreased by 50% or more since 2001. It’s unclear how many koalas remain.
While the animal welfare groups welcomed the Australian government’s actions announced Friday, others said that key problems — specifically land clearing, deforestation and resulting habitat loss — had been neglected.
Deborah Tabart, chair of the Australian Koala Foundation, said the animal’s new status “doesn’t mean anything.” The federal government, she added, “may be offering our koalas a nice new word, but behind all the photo opportunities and political rhetoric they continue to approve the destruction of the koala habitat.”
Birthdays
Movie director CostaGavras is 89. Basketball Hall of Famer Bill Russell is 88. Actor Joe Don Baker is 86. Author Judy Blume is 84. Actor Maud Adams is 77. Singer Michael McDonald is 70. Actor Joanna Kerns is 69. Actor-talk show host Arsenio Hall is 66. Actor Josh Brolin is 54. Actor Christina Ricci is 42.
Figure skater Michelle Kwan e ectively retired from competition as she withdrew from the Turin Olympics due to injury. Snowboarder Shaun White beat American teammate Danny Kass to win the Olympic gold medal.
Today’s estimated jackpot: $172 million