Zürcher Nachrichten - Cars, chlamydia threaten Australian koalas

EUR -
AED 3.999232
AFN 73.744968
ALL 98.576134
AMD 421.371305
ANG 1.964736
AOA 989.782593
ARS 1067.037407
AUD 1.622327
AWG 1.9604
AZN 1.842503
BAM 1.951961
BBD 2.201071
BDT 130.273795
BGN 1.955228
BHD 0.41046
BIF 3215.97526
BMD 1.088809
BND 1.425097
BOB 7.549153
BRL 6.09352
BSD 1.090156
BTN 91.649456
BWP 14.49649
BYN 3.567584
BYR 21340.650128
BZD 2.197378
CAD 1.503449
CDF 3133.59146
CHF 0.939484
CLF 0.036571
CLP 1009.118744
CNY 7.752538
CNH 7.764975
COP 4583.057048
CRC 563.99082
CUC 1.088809
CUP 28.85343
CVE 110.048572
CZK 25.272554
DJF 194.128215
DKK 7.460887
DOP 65.581024
DZD 145.542118
EGP 52.904112
ERN 16.33213
ETB 130.964038
FJD 2.450144
FKP 0.833123
GBP 0.834887
GEL 2.95615
GGP 0.833123
GHS 17.365847
GIP 0.833123
GMD 74.6066
GNF 9404.504507
GTQ 8.43042
GYD 228.07146
HKD 8.457882
HNL 27.127649
HRK 7.500836
HTG 143.517749
HUF 400.964476
IDR 16976.541617
ILS 4.089293
IMP 0.833123
INR 91.530102
IQD 1428.091425
IRR 45841.563555
ISK 149.297551
JEP 0.833123
JMD 172.580592
JOD 0.771639
JPY 162.811746
KES 140.620082
KGS 93.086512
KHR 4428.291043
KMF 489.41499
KPW 979.927566
KRW 1483.991514
KWD 0.333992
KYD 0.908413
KZT 528.969695
LAK 23907.981052
LBP 97621.21195
LKR 319.411825
LRD 209.847301
LSL 19.113211
LTL 3.214969
LVL 0.658609
LYD 5.224725
MAD 10.687082
MDL 19.257128
MGA 5015.136915
MKD 61.621151
MMK 3536.408121
MNT 3699.771925
MOP 8.72015
MRU 43.158123
MUR 50.434179
MVR 16.71315
MWK 1890.182647
MXN 21.168182
MYR 4.693315
MZN 69.573305
NAD 19.113211
NGN 1781.301717
NIO 40.121095
NOK 11.781492
NPR 146.639609
NZD 1.791025
OMR 0.419151
PAB 1.090156
PEN 4.060814
PGK 4.287568
PHP 62.954374
PKR 302.783926
PLN 4.295384
PYG 8532.219996
QAR 3.973785
RON 4.974983
RSD 117.00656
RUB 102.892965
RWF 1468.611735
SAR 4.088494
SBD 9.036379
SCR 15.089199
SDG 654.916242
SEK 11.366297
SGD 1.427417
SHP 0.833123
SLE 24.525393
SLL 22831.770132
SOS 622.974818
SRD 34.935541
STD 22536.14138
SVC 9.538241
SYP 2735.664765
SZL 19.109418
THB 36.391794
TJS 11.609867
TMT 3.821718
TND 3.355601
TOP 2.550097
TRY 37.314954
TTD 7.401444
TWD 35.039495
TZS 2968.830653
UAH 44.912872
UGX 3995.142899
USD 1.088809
UYU 45.510496
UZS 13931.601232
VEF 3944266.643186
VES 42.288401
VND 27149.444435
VUV 129.265586
WST 3.049953
XAF 654.669486
XAG 0.035088
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.942559
XDR 0.814598
XOF 654.669486
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.583198
ZAR 19.191779
ZMK 9800.584071
ZMW 28.806348
ZWL 350.595951
  • SCS

    0.0700

    12.98

    +0.54%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    142.98

    +0.43%

  • RIO

    0.4700

    67.7

    +0.69%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.69

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    -0.4600

    32.56

    -1.41%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.22

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    60.5000

    60.5

    +100%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.98

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.6500

    66.89

    +0.97%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.04

    +0.14%

  • GSK

    0.3000

    39.13

    +0.77%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.68

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    78.1

    +0.96%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    47.38

    +1.16%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    35.45

    +0.76%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    31.99

    -0.38%

Cars, chlamydia threaten Australian koalas
Cars, chlamydia threaten Australian koalas / Photo: Saeed KHAN - AFP

Cars, chlamydia threaten Australian koalas

Clinging to a fluffy toy twice her size, orphaned koala joey Ajooni made a snuffling noise as she drank milk from a tiny syringe.

Text size:

Weighing about the same as a mango, she was found by the side of a Sydney road where her mother was hit by a car and died.

It is a familiar tale for wildlife carer Emma Meadows.

Over the past two years, Meadows and other volunteers have recovered 40 koalas hit by cars in their neighbourhood. The number left for dead is likely much higher.

Koalas are shy and notoriously difficult to count.

There are anywhere between 95,000 and 524,000 left in Australia, possibly down from millions before European settlement.

There is little doubt that expanding cities, land clearance and the spread of chlamydia are devastating the populations of one of Australia's most iconic animals.

East Coast koalas were officially listed as "endangered" by the Australian government in 2022.

"I actually, truly, believe we're heading towards extinction," said Meadows, a volunteer with WIRES.

"I don't know if there is any coming back from this. I'm scared it's too late."

Chlamydia was first observed in koalas about 50 years ago. In the decades since, it has wiped out entire local populations.

The bacteria leads to blindness, bladder infections, infertility, and death.

Although some chlamydia-free koala populations exist –- such as the area where Ajooni was found -– scientists fear these pockets may soon disappear.

- World's 'extinction capital' -

Annabelle Olsson, director of the University of Sydney Wildlife Health and Conservation Hospital, has regularly examined rescued koalas -- including seven-month-old Ajooni.

On the day AFP visited the centre, a sedated three-year-old koala lay on an operation table, while Olsson and her team took the marsupial's blood, did X-rays and examined the koala's face.

The koala was chlamydia-free but had a head injury that impacted her reflexes and would require further attention.

Olsson said without better koala protections "our grandchildren, or at least their grandchildren, are going to see maybe koalas in a zoo if they're lucky".

"Australia is an island nation with an incredibly high biodiversity and incredibly unique wildlife species and floral species that need to be preserved," she said.

Scientists believe Australia has the highest rate of mammal extinction in the world, with about 100 of the country's unique flora and fauna species wiped out in the last 123 years.

Environment minister Tanya Plibersek has said Australia is "the mammal extinction capital of the world. "

While there are some rules and guidelines to protect koala habitats, koala bushland continues to be cleared.

- Vaccine hopes -

Some have instead focused their conservation efforts on quelling the spread of koala chlamydia.

University of the Sunshine Coast researcher Samuel Phillips is part of a team working on a potential vaccine.

They have vaccinated and monitored 165 koalas over 10 years and found inoculated marsupials developed chlamydia later in life and their mortality was reduced by 64 percent.

A Queensland trial of the vaccination, used in conjunction with traffic and predator controls, was so successful that a local koala population doomed for extinction within 10 years rebounded.

Some marsupials will even need to be translocated to stop overpopulation, Phillips said.

"It's been a really positive story," he said.

However, Phillips warns that more needs to be done to address the other key drivers of koala decline, particularly the deforestation of their habitats.

"We can keep protecting these small populations, but without increasing the habitat and protecting it, then they won't be living."

- 'Make a difference' -

Ajooni will remain in Meadow's care until she is big enough to be released back into the wild.

It will be a "bittersweet" moment for Meadow, but she says seeing any koala successfully released is the best feeling.

That feeling is what keeps her going through the awful parts of her volunteer role: scraping dead koala bodies off the road in the middle of the night, or finding animals that are so severely injured that they need to be put down.

"I continue to do what I do because somebody needs to make a difference, and I feel that this is one way in the world that I can make a difference," Meadows said.

R.Schmid--NZN