just thought I'd stick this on here (not exactly a new idea but it is new to the news thread)
Mainland Aus may become home to Tas devils - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
It is just an idea being bandied about, but I am not too keen on it!
I am sure you Aussie and NZ folks are all too well aware of the fact what (negative) impact most foreign animal introductions have meant to native flora and fauna. Since 1788 19 mammalian and 20 bird species (not to mention reptiles, amphibians and invertebrate fauna) have become extinct in Australia. I can not cite the accurate - and mainly - bird extinction percentage in NZ, but that is equally dim and sobering reading.
Now to introduce Tassie devils to a mainland habitat outside the confines of a zoo - even if it is fenced - does not do it for me somehow. Zoo rescue and breeding facilities fine, but introduction of a species that is and has not occurred on mainland Australia is an entirely different matter. We need to confront the facial tumor issue that is precipitating the extinction of Tassie devils head-on from a vet health perspective (like in Homo sapies we do so often in cancer and drug treatment) and the habitat encroachment issue in Tasmania that is endangering their current future.
What about an environmental impact assessment? What about potential impact of Tassie devils on local herbivore marsupial communities, let alone endangered taxa?
I like to have these answers first, before going ahead with any mainland Tassie outback initiative is allowed to move forward.