Local Land Services has joined forces with landholders on the North Coast and is achieving phenomenal results in the fight against cane toads.
Recent cane toad control efforts in northern NSW have resulted in the control of over 10,000 adult and juvenile toads on 62 private properties affected by this invasive pest species.
North Coast Local Land Services General Manager, Louise Orr, said this is a fantastic result for biosecurity in northern NSW.
"It highlights how if we work together with landholders and the community, we can make inroads in the control of this major pest and prevent it spreading to other parts of NSW," Ms Orr said.
LLS engaged regional Landcare networks Border Ranges Richmond Valley Landcare Network and Clarence Landcare to deploy on-ground teams who carried out collection and trapping on landholder properties.
The program delivered education and training to private landholders in the Kyogle, Richmond and Clarence local government areas, aiming to equip them with tools to identify and control cane toads on their properties into the future.
Ms Orr said one female cane toad can produce between 8000 to 35,000 eggs annually.
"Managing populations of this highly invasive species in a large landscape is a challenge and requires a coordinated approach," Ms Orr said.
"Targeting a network of multiple properties the program is able to maximise results and control even more toads.
"I am particularly proud the program engaged 16 Indigenous people as sub-contractors to carry out control work. Not only has this directly supported local employment in northern NSW areas that were hit hard by the 2019-20 bushfires, we successfully supported Aboriginal businesses in line with State-wide procurement objectives."
Cane toads are a serious invasive species and recognised as key threatening process for threatened species and ecological communities under Commonwealth and NSW legislation.
Pest control activities have operated within the biosecurity zone established under the NSW Biosecurity Act 2015. With community education ongoing, the public is being asked to report any suspected cane toads, as the specimen could be a native frog. The amphibian should not be killed if it has not been positively identified as acane toad.
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North Coast Local Land Services is assisting farmers in their fight against cane toads - The Macleay Argus
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