Sunday, November 24, 2024

In Other News

Related Posts

Most NSW residents don’t know they are neighbours to koalas

November 2022 – Environmental not-for-profit group Total Environment Centre has established the Sydney Basin Koala Network (SBKN) with three-year funding from Australia’s largest rescue organisation WIRES.

The new action group comes as the NSW Government considers legislation and approvals for new urban development that would put endangered koalas at further risk.

To mark the launch, a new YouGov study of 1000+ metro and regional NSW residents has confirmed awareness of koalas living near our towns and cities is critically low.

With less than a third of residents (31%) aware that koalas live in neighbouring bushland in close proximity to busy residential areas in the Sydney Basin – from the Blue Mountains to Nowra.

However, concern for their protection is high for the majority (84%) who believe koala habitat should be more strongly protected from economic activities such as urban development, mining and logging.

Jeff Angel, Director of Total Environment Centre, said:

‘’The study confirms most people don’t know they live in a city that neighbours endangered koalas.

And yet, koalas are living in the forests around Sydney and in the region stretching from Newcastle to the Blue Mountains to Nowra, and are at risk from increasing urbanisation, mining and logging.

This species has been listed as endangered by the Commonwealth and NSW governments and yet we have legislation on the table that is actively working to undermine their conservation”

Key Findings:

° Whilst most (81%) NSW citizens aged 18+ say that koalas live in bushland,less than one in three (31%) are aware that koalas reside at the edge of their cities or towns City dwellers are less aware of koalas living in neighbouring urban environments than those in regional areas (27% vs 40%)

° Lowest levels of awareness were with younger residents; just 16% of those aged 18-24 were aware of the close proximity of koalas to the city than older residents 50+ (36%)

° Men more likely than women to say that koalas live at the edge of their towns and cities (respectively 35% and 27%). Those aged 50 and over are more than twice as likely to hold this opinion (35% for aged 50 – 64 and 37% for aged 65+) than younger NSW citizens (16% for aged 18 – 24).

° Respondents residing in the Sydney Basin area are less likely to say that koalas live on the edge of their cities and towns (27%), compared to those residing in other parts of NSW (40%). 

° Over four-in-five (84%) NSW citizens say that koala habitats should be protected from development (including housing, mining, logging, and more).

° One-in-ten (10%) support the use of koala habitat for economic activities such as urban development, housing, mining, and logging, this differs by region. Respondents residing in inner metropolitan areas are more inclined to hold this view compared to rural residents (respectively 13% and 6%).

° The majority (91%) of NSW citizens support the koala green belt initiative that protects native
forest and bushland for koala habitats, making it off-limits to development – 62% ‘strongly
support’ this. Conversely, just 5% oppose this scheme.

° Asked about their views on the amount of native forest conserved for koala habitats, two-thirds (64%) say that it is ‘too little’ – this is especially pronounced for respondents outside the Sydney Basin region (70%, compared with 62% for Sydney Basin respondents).

° Three-in-five (62%) say that property developers, logging and mining companies are given “too much” power over land use in natural forest. 

YouGov conducted this poll with a politically representative online sample of 1,008 NSW citizens aged
18+ in both city and regional areas between 2 – 9 November 2022. The theoretical margin of error on a
sample of this size is ±3.44 percentage points. Due to rounding, totals for results may not add to 100.

Koala
Photo Valeriia Miller

The Sydney Basin Koala Network aims to increase awareness of the iconic Koala species through increasing public awareness, putting koala protection and associated issues on the state and federal agenda including citizen science, supporting community groups and working with a wide variety of stakeholders.

‘’The funding from WIRES is allowing us to mobilise resources to engage experts in the science, communications and legal fields; to progressively build a citizen science network; collaborate with and assist local, state and national NGOs; and inform communities about the fate of their local koalas. 

The next three years are critical as urban, mining and other developments threaten to clear critical habitat and connecting corridors”

Jeff Angel, Director of Total Environment Centre, said

WIRES CEO Leanne Taylor added:

“WIRES is well aware that koalas in the Sydney Basin are under threat – year after year we are responding to more calls to rescue injured and orphaned Koalas.

The impacts of the 2019/2020 Black Summer Bushfires once again raised the alarm that the remaining healthy colonies of koalas need to be protected if they are to survive and repopulate the regenerating forests.

The chlamydia free status of these koalas makes them critically important to the long term survival of the species in Sydney’s Basin.

We hope that combining the resources of WIRES and Total Environment Centre will lead to a safer future for these Koalas.”

Jeff Angel added:

‘’We want to work with all stakeholders – government, private and community – to establish a sustainable consensus that the Sydney Basin’s Koalas and the plants and animals they share their home with, are a precious part of our stewardship for present and future generations.

We will be issuing an annual report card on the progress of Koala protection.”

ABOUT THE SYDNEY BASIN KOALA NETWORK  

The Sydney Basin Koala Network (SBKN) has been established by Total Environment Centre (created in 1972 with a long track record of environment protection), partnered with 3-year funding from WIRES, covering the Sydney Basin (Newcastle to the Blue Mountains to Nowra), with the objectives of:

  • Increasing public knowledge and appreciation of the region’s Koala populations through surveys, a variety of communication channels (local, state, and national) and community briefings
  • Informing local, state and federal governments about the existence, conservation status of and threats to the Koala populations and effective measures to protect them and expand their range
  • Utilising citizen science according to a credible survey methodology to monitor the populations and record the sightings on a database and map accessible in the public domain
  • Support community groups to protect Koala habitat by support for surveys, mapping of sightings and the provision of information and policies
  • Working with non-government groups, scientists, corporates, and conservation agencies to achieve these aims

The Sydney Basin Koala Network has so far been endorsed by the following partners: 

Nature Conservation Council, Australian Climate and Forest Alliance, Humane Society Australia, Australian Wildlife Society, International Fund for Animal Welfare, Lithgow Environment Group, Save Manly Dam Catchment Committee, Hills-Hornsby Rural Koala Project, Save Sydney’s Koalas.
Further recruitment is ongoing.

Editor in Chief
Editor in Chief
Webmaster responsible for all editorial content & website management at 1EarthMedia.

Popular Articles

error: Content is protected !!