Forest and Bird sounds caution on possum fur idea
The Forest and Bird Protection Society is not
enthusiastic about proposals
floated by Alliance leader
Jim Anderton to provide government assistance to
the
possum fur industry.
Forest and Bird's Conservation
Director, Kevin Smith, said effective possum
control for
conservation purposes or TB control could not be achieved
by
commercial possum trappers.
"Possum trapping can
only be profitable, at the low prices paid by the
fur
industry of a couple of dollars a skin, when possum
numbers are high. Yet
possum numbers need to be reduced
to very low levels to provide effective
protection for
native forests or to eradicate TB-carrying possums."
Mr
Smith said he was a commercial possum trapper in the late
70s when fur
prices were ten times higher than
today.
"Even at those high prices, possum trappers needed
to farm areas, moving on
once numbers dropped."
"The
idea of sending out unemployed people to trap possums for an
export fur
industry sounds great in theory. But in
practice, this would really just
subsidise a marginally
viable industry without achieving forest conservation
or
animal health goals."
"Over the last ten years regional
councils and the Department of
Conservation have become
very efficient at reducing possum numbers by eighty
to
ninety percent in areas targeted for control."
Mr Smith
said the current possum control operations already
provided
significant employment opportunities but it was
important their work was
targeted to areas where the
possum impacts were greatest.
"If the government adopted
the possum fur industry's proposal for a $1 a
possum
bounty, they could squander millions of dollars and achieve
few
benefits for conservation or for animal health."
Mr
Smith said possum control nowadays was not totally reliant
on aerial 1080
but made considerable use of contract
ground
trappers.
......ends