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Brush
Tailed Bettongs
The Little Aussie Diggers |
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Fox and rabbit-proof fence
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These little Aussie diggers are the key to our organic farming success at The Food Forest For a hundred thousand years Australia’s landscape has been tilled by hundreds of thousands of little nocturnal marsupials called bettongs. Their vital function in the environment was lost in South Australia when the Brush Tailed Bettong lost the uneven battle with European settlers and their exotic animals, the fox, the rabbit, the sheep and the cat. Now they are back and are working alongside organic farmers Annemarie and Graham Brookman to control weeds and revegetate their award-winning permaculture farm ‘The Food Forest’ at Gawler. The extinction of the SA subspecies (Bettongia pencillata pencillata) is one of the many tragedies in the state known as the world’s capital of mammal extinction. However in 1977 an almost identical bettong subspecies was imported from WA and flourished on small islands off the SA coast. More recently the ‘mini-kangaroos’ have done very well in protected environments such as Warrawong Sanctuary in the Adelaide Hills. In the early 90's Annemarie and Graham were wanting to extend the organic status of their vegetable gardens to the whole 35 acre property but weed control seemed a massive hurdle to Graham who had been using Roundup down the forest and orchard rows. Whilst the use of sheep for weed control had been used successfully in established tree plantings on other properties, the effect they would have in compacting the fragile silty soils of the The Food Forest led to their rejection. ‘We had to find a range of soft footed animals that would control a broad spectrum of weeds’ said Graham. ‘Geese were an obvious choice as they have been used in French vineyards for centuries but it occurred to us that if we were going to protect them from foxes, we could add the indigenous Cape Barren Goose and possibly a range of marsupials that would have been common on the Adelaide Plain. We consulted with John Walmsley from Warrawong Sanctuary and settled on trying Dama Wallabies and Brush Tailed Bettongs. The experiment was a success and the bettongs bred well. We could see revegetation happening before our eyes! The bettongs naturally seek-out seeds that have fallen from acacia bushes and other plants, then hop away some distance, dig a shallow hole with their front paws, spit the seeds in and bury them. After rain the seed will begin to soften and germinate and this is the bettong’s favourite food, but they don’t find and eat all of the seed they’ve buried and the missed seeds grow into new plants’ he said. ‘In their digging our bettongs had come across the bulbs of Sour Sobs (indigenous to South Africa), one of our worst crop weeds; luckily they found the starchy bulbs delicious and they have now helped to control the weed for about 10 years’ said Graham. A problem of excluding foxes and cats from the property was that the rat population skyrocketed and, not content with eating fruit, the rats did substantial damage to dripper line. However the bettongs did not take kindly to the rats and as the bettong population rose, the rats were driven off the place. The magic marsupials had saved the day once more! Meanwhile the geese had found some isolated occurences of Couch Grass, another bitter foe of organic farmers and gardeners; they selectively grazed the grassy weeds and that was the end of the couch. That left the bigger broad-leafed weeds - which the wallabies enjoyed browsing. In this animal inclusive system any fallen fruit or nuts are cleaned up promptly so disease carry-over is avoided. Graham says that building productive ecosystems
that incorporate indigenous species is not difficult and is immensely rewarding,
however he is critical of the legislation covering the use of indigenous
species in. He says that every year thousands of wallabies are killed in
SA and left to rot in culls to control overpopulation, whilst in Tasmania
they are harvested on a sustainable basis to maintain sustainable populations.
At the same time SA was one of the first states to introduce kangaroo harvesting
for population control while other states ‘shot to rot’. The devastation
of native plants by introduced Koalas on Kangaroo Island has been a problem
for some years however no sustainable resolution has been reached.Confusion
reigns.
A note from Stephen Hardy, noted SA conservationist
Links
http://www.arazpa.org.au/Education_FactSheets_Bettong.htm http://www.nht.gov.au/nht1/programs/bushcare/saproj.html
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