Author Archives: AWPC

Goodwill Wines- reward yourselves and help our wildlife campaigns too!

We have an exciting new business partnership with Goodwill Wines.  Their wine list is a constantly changing selection of some of the best boutique wines from around Australia and is sold in either 12 or 6 bottle cases.

If you select 2 x 6 bottle cases of different varieties, we will package them up as a single 12 bottle case so you save on freight. 50% of the profit (a minimum of $20 per case) from your purchase will go to AWPC, and all purchases come with a 100% money-back guarantee.

Australian Wildlife Protection Council AWPC established the National Kangaroo Campaign in 1992 which has grown to incorporate the wider International Community.The Kangaroo especially, in this country is under enormous pressure from both the commercial kangaroo industry and the rural sector and it needs as much support as it can get for it’s very survival in it’s home land.

50% of the profit from every bottle you purchase (listed below) goes towards helping Australian Wildlife Protection Council continue it’s work.

Thank you for your support.

 Wines

Sparkling Pinot Chard Demi-Sec 2008
$19.00 /bottle
$228.00 /case
Macedon Ranges, SV 2008
24hrs only!! A beautiful semi-dry ‘semi-sweet’ Methode Traditionelle sparkling with a catch. Please read on.. (Vegan) RRP $40.00 … more information, reviews and media
Sparkling Rose 2013
$20.00 /bottle
$240.00 /case
Mornington Peninsula VIC, SV 2013
Creamy strawberries and peaches with a dry savoury finish makes for the perfect celebratory drink. (Vegan) RRP $32.00 … more
Sauvignon Blanc 2014
$15.00 /bottle
$180.00 /case
Coonawarra SA, SV 2014
A graceful wine of medium weight and serious complexity with soft linear acid. Very easy drinking. (Vegan) RRP $19.00 … more information, reviews and media
Chardonnay 2014
$15.00 /bottle
$180.00 /case
Coonawarra SA, SV 2014
Wooded Chardonnay is back! A vibrant, textured wine with tropical fruit flavours and intense stone fruits is a beautiful thing. (Vegan) RRP $21.00 … more
Sauvignon Blanc 2013
$14.00 /bottle
$168.00 /case
Yarra Valley VIC, SV 2013
Subtle white florals, gooseberry and grapefruit blossom delicately layered within a beautifully textured wine. (Vegan) RRP $20.00 … more information, reviews and media
Riesling 2015
$16.00 /bottle
$192.00 /case
Eden Valley SA, SV 2015
Perfect for a summer day, this sweet wine is beautifully balanced with a long dry citrus finish. (Vegan) … more information, reviews and media
Pinot Noir 2013
$22.00 /bottle
$264.00 /case
Ballarat VIC, 2013
Rich mulberry and dark plums with a beautiful nose of bramble fruit, briar and subtle french oak. Fantastic value. (Vegan) RRP $35 … more
Cabernet Sauvignon 2013
$15.00 /bottle
$180.00 /case
Coonawarra SA, SV 2013
An attractive, medium-bodied wine consistent with the rich red earth of Australia’s premier Cabernet region. (Vegan) … more
Merlot 2010
$16.00 /bottle
$192.00 /case
Yarra Valley VIC, SV 2010
Savoury blackberry, tobacco, choc-mint nougat and toasted coconut. At this price one of the best Merlots you will ever try. (Vegan) RRP $24.00 … more
Merlot 2013
$14.50 /bottle
$174.00 /case
Coonawarra SA, SV 2013
Intense aromas of blood plum and spice. Succulent raspberry and blackberry and silky smooth tannin. (Vegan) … more information, reviews and media
Shiraz 2014
$15.00 /bottle
$180.00 /case
Coonawarra SA, SV 2014
Rich cherry and cranberry flavours with notes of white pepper and spices. Cellar up to ten years. (Vegan) … more information, reviews and media
Vegan Mixed Case
$15.00 /bottle
$180.00 /case
Mixed Vintage, 2010 to 2015
A lovely mix of red and white vegan wines. … more information, reviews and media
Mixed Red (vegan)
$17.50 /bottle
$210.00 /case
Mixed Vintage, 2010 to 2013
No animal products are used in the making of any of the red wines in this mixed case. (Vegan) … more information, reviews and media
Mixed White (vegan)
$15.00 /bottle
$180.00 /case
Mixed Vintage, 2013 to 2015
No animal products are used in the making of any of the white wines in this mixed case. (Vegan) … more information, reviews and media

ORDER HERE – Goodwill Wines

Share This:

Great Forest National Park urgently needed

Great Forest National Park needs your pledge.

Victoria is still far from having a comprehensive, adequate and representative national park and conservation system, and most major threats to nature identified in past reviews are still very much with us – habitat loss and degradation, invasive species, harmful fire regimes, over-grazing, modified water flows. Precious habitat remnants are being bulldozed for urban expansion or roads. Victoria is the most cleared state in Australia, populations of native birds and animals are in freefall, and less than 25% of our rivers and creeks are in good condition.

The Great Forest National Park proposes that Victorians create and add a new 355,000 hectares of protected forests to the existing 170,000 hectares of parks and protected areas in the Central Highlands of Victoria. The basis for this tenure change is weighed scientifically, socially and economically against 5 key reasons;

1. Conservation of near extinct wildlife and plants after Black Saturday and in light of future fire events.

2. Water catchments of Melbourne, LaTrobe and the Goulburn Murray systems. The largest area of clean water and catchment in Victoria. Food bowl and community security.

3. Tourism. This is Victoria’s richest ecological asset, but these magnificent forests have not yet been included in a state plan to encourage tourism. Our rural towns want and need this boost to tourism.

4. Climate. These ash forests store more carbon per hectare than any other forest studied in the world. They sequester carbon, modulate the climate and can act as giant storage banks to absorb excess carbon if they are not logged. The financial opportunity in carbon credits is significant and can be paid directly to the state when a system is established federally.

5. Places of spiritual nourishment. These magnificent forests have been described as a ‘keeping place’ by the traditional owners, a place to secure the story of the land and places of spiritual nourishment that we pass on to future generations. There should be no price tag on the value nature brings to mental health and spiritual well-being.

The tallest flowering trees on Earth grow north-east of Melbourne. In their high canopies dwell owls, gliders and the tiny Leadbeater’s (or Fairy) Possum. Victoria’s precious and endangered faunal emblem lives only in these ash forests of the Central Highlands.

Mountain_Ash_in_Victoria(image: Mountain Ash, Black Spur, Victoria)

David Lindenmayer, from the Australian National University, is an ecologist and conservation biologist who has spent over 30 years studying the Mountain Ash Forest of Victoria.

‘There’s a little mixture of things that always want to have the last word. The Lyrebird is one and the Kookaburra is another and the Eastern Yellow Robin and the Pilot Bird are two others,’ he says.

Eastern_yellow_robin(image: Eastern Yellow Robin, Victoria)

‘The birds are calling less than in the morning, but still nevertheless calling, and they’re just confirming their territories before there’s an extraordinary change in the light in this long dusk period,’
says Lindenmayer.

The Mountain Ash, and one of Australia’s most endangered mammals, the Leadbeater’s Possum, are threatened by ongoing clear-felling and bushfires.
The population of large old hollow-bearing trees has collapsed. These are a critical habitat for the animals that use them, including Leadbeater’s Possum. There is a high risk that the possums will become exinct in the next 20-40 years.

GFNP

(image source: http://www.greatforestnationalpark.com.au/park-plan.html)

Home to threatened species, including Victoria’s animal emblem – the Fairy Possum, the proposed park will also be a sanctuary, providing real and lasting protection to some of Victoria’s, and the world’s, rarest plant and animal species. Prominent environmentalists Tim Flannery and Bob Brown have lent their support to the campaign. Sir David Attenborough has weighed into the state election, backing a call for the creation of a Great Forest National Park to protect the state faunal emblem, the Leadbeater’s possum.

The environmentalist’s intervention comes as a survey found 89 per cent of Victorians support the creation of a new national park in the Yarra Ranges and Central Highlands.

Logging over many years had previously reduced the Leadbeater’s possum down to a fraction of its original range and now only around one per cent of mountain ash forest is old growth. A new ‘taskforce’ attempts to negotiate the future of the logging industry in the central highlands of Victoria and the possible creation of the new national park, in light of the critical status of Leadbeater’s Possums.

The state government — elected in November — has so far made no official commitment to the proposed 355,000-hectare Great Forest National Park, which would include both recreational areas and conservation zones.

https://www.facebook.com/GreatForestNP?fref=ts

The good news is that the Victorian Government has given its strongest indication yet that it is open to ending clearfelling and closing down the hardwood timber industry in key parts of Victoria’s Central Highlands to prevent the extinction of the Leadbeater’s Possum.


‘The time for further reviews and studies is over. The only thing that will save Leadbeater’s Possums from extinction is to immediately stop the clearfell logging of the forest it lives in,’
Greens Senator Rice said.

Join the Great Forest National Park Volunteer Campaign Team. Text ‘GFNP volunteer’ to 0428 029 437. http://wilderness.org.au/articles/great-forest-national-park#sthash.UHAmATbg.dpuf

Send Your message of Support:

Share This:

Growling Grass Frog growls for attention as Melbourne’s growth corridors threaten annihilation

By Sheila Newman, reprinted from Candobetter.net website.

This scientific study into the endangered Growling Grass Frog was released overnight and looks at how the genetic diversity of the frog is being negatively impacted by the rapid urbanisation of Melbourne’s fringe. They were once very abundant in Victoria (so abundant that they used to feed them to the snakes the Melbourne Zoo!) and now only a few populations exist around Melbourne.

The scientists have found a population of the frogs in the Cardinia Shire, which has an increased genetic diversity that they hope to protect.

Claire Keely, the lead scientist on the paper, is both a PhD student and part of the Live Exhibits team at the Melbourne Museum (where they have some of the pretty green frogs in question).

Scientific study finds the vulnerable Growling Grass Frog under increasing threat from rapid urbanisation in Melbourne. (Download paper as full pdf publication here: /files/Genetic stucture and diversity of the endangered growling grass frog in a rapidly urbanizing region.pdf)

A paper by scientists from Museum Victoria and The University of Melbourne has today been published in the Royal Society of London Open Science journal. It describes how the Growling Grass Frog’s genetic diversity is being negatively impacted by rapid habitat loss as Melbourne’s urban fringe continues to expand.

Growling_Grass_Frog_(Litoria_raniformis)_(8615947746)

Urbanisation is a leading cause of species extinction worldwide and is considered a major threat to global biodiversity.

The Growling Grass Frog is listed as vulnerable to extinction in Australia, but isolated populations still persist in the greater Melbourne area. Many of these populations are located in the city’s proposed urban growth area, causing concern as the species is known to be sensitive to habitat fragmentation caused by urbanisation.

The study found that there is decreased genetic diversity in the remaining populations found in Wyndham, Melton and Hume-Whittlesea, making the frogs more prone to inbreeding and less able to cope with the threats posed by urbanisation. The scientists have also found that populations in the Cardinia Shire, one of the four regions studied, are genetically distinct.

“Genetic diversity is key to maintaining the population of Growling Grass Frogs in Victoria as it makes them more resilient to the threats posed by urbanisation. If they are to survive in greater Melbourne the population found in Cardinia will require separate conservation management,” said Claire Keely, PhD student, Museum Victoria and The University of Melbourne, who led the study.

This study demonstrates the importance of genetic research on vulnerable species and can be used to inform conservation efforts to maintain populations.

The team are currently looking to gain further funding to extend the study into the Gippsland region in order to find out more about the frog species genetic diversity and how the Cardinia populations are related to those further east.

The Growling Grass Frog is one of the largest frog species in Australia. They are found in south eastern Australia and were once so abundant in Victoria that they were used for dissections in universities and to feed the snakes the Melbourne Zoo.

For interviews, images, video footage or to meet a Growling Grass Frog at the Melbourne Museum please get in contact.

Share This:

Help CLOSE Koala Park Sanctuary in Sydney, Australia

One of Australia’s oldest animal parks, Koala Park Sanctuary in the north-western Sydney suburb of west Pennant Hills, has pleaded guilty to three charges of ill treatment of their animals.

This is on top of receiving numerous other defects over the years from Department of Primary Industries which placed defect notices to the park for ageing and dirty animal exhibits, drainage problems and out of date records.

Koala Park Sanctuary was founded in 1920’s and opened to the public in October 1930, by Noel Burnet. The idea behind the Koala Park Sanctuary, was to protect the koalas which were killed for their fur and could have become extinct in future.

1200px-KOALA_SANCTUARY

(image:Female kangaroo with a joey, at Koala Park Sanctuary at better times: 11 Oct, 1970)

One of Australia’s oldest parks, the Koala Park Sanctuary looks as if it has been forgotten over time.

It’s become Australia’s saddest zoo: The koala ‘sanctuary’ has just three miserable koalas, emaciated kangaroos and one lonely penguin who is refusing to eat.  The park houses emaciated kangaroos, lethargic dingoes, lonely penguins,  and only three koalas.  Scrawny emaciated kangaroos, agitated koalas desperate to get out of their pens, lethargic dingoes with a stagnant drinking trough and one lonely fairy penguin which has stopped eating.

 RSPCA NSW confirmed that the Koala Sanctuary had pleaded guilty to three charges of ill treatment of its chlamydia-ridden koalas and would be sentenced in February. It is facing fines of up to $190,000 from the RSPCA amid claims its koalas are riddled with a potentially fatal sexually transmitted disease.

 buckleyulcers3

(image: A koala with ulcers due to chlamydia.)

The park has pleaded not guilty to seven counts of failing to provide veterinary treatment to the koalas ­between February 25 and March 25 this year. Each count carries a maximum penalty of $27,000.

 A sanctuary is by definition a place of safety, and protection, for native animals.  This one has become one where animals are neglected, and thus need protection from it!

Click here to Sign the Petition:

 

 

Share This:

How “controlled” are controlled burns?

A Lancefield fire spread from a “controlled burn” that breached containment lines. The circumstances of one of the most destructive fires has prompted the Victorian state government to look for fresh answers in how to prevent future outbreaks. The Lancefield “controlled burn” turned into a bushfire which has destroyed five homes, 19 sheds, burnt almost 3000 hectares and generated fury among local residents.

Opponents regularly express concern over the impact of planned, or prescribed, burns on native forest and native animals. Some have questioned whether fuel reduction burns actually work!

The fire spread from a controlled burn-off that breached containment lines, while much of Victoria’s attention was on the AFL grand final on Saturday afternoon. Fire Chief Mr Goodwin could not say how many staff were rostered on that Friday or Saturday.

The CFA had hoped to bring the 4000-hectare fire under control by Thursday night but was racing to gain the upper hand before a northerly wind change and possible thunderstorms on Saturday.

burn-sign-1829
(image: Burnt koala, Environment East Gippsland: The wildlife cost of DEPI burns – shocking imagery. )

A fire-bombing aircraft helped Edgar’s Mission, near Lancefield, a farm animal sanctuary that houses 250 rescued animals.

Alan Goodwin said the Cobaw forest burn-off’s escape was regrettable, but he denied emphatically the operation had been under-staffed and ignorant of pending heatwave conditions.

An external review, led by the director of Western Australia’s Office of Bushfire Risk Management Murray Carter, will examine whether enough staff were allocated throughout the burn.

The fire defied efforts to contain it, and fire-fighters were redeployed elsewhere even though hot and windy weather was predicted. The first scare for DELWP came when the fire jumped containment lines on Saturday. 20 DELWP and Parks Victoria fire-fighters were monitoring the fire on the Sunday and Monday.

The policy to burn 5% of Victoria’s vegetation each year, in order to reduce the risk of bushfires taking hold near properties and critical infrastructure, will be under greater scrutiny.

Chief Officer of the CFA, Euan Ferguson, said “history has shown us that a well-managed, well-resourced planned burning program can be successfully executed, (and) can make a difference”.

Victoria has a long history of catastrophic bushfires. These “controlled” burns are a disgrace and those who organise them should be charged with arson. They choose the wrong days when the weather is too dangerous for a burn and when the fires get out of control it’s the farmers, the home owners, the native birds and animals, and the national parks that suffer.

 

Burned-Koala

These “controlled” or “prescribed” burns are about using fire to squelch fire. This is about burning hectares of our bush, in Victoria, to clear it of vegetation, and wildlife are simply the collateral damage. In reality, it’s making our State more flammable by destroying what actually limits fires – the biodiversity, ecosystems, fungi, tree canopies that produce rain and maintain moisture, and wildlife such as kangaroos that eat the long grass! Torching small animals, such as possums and tree-dwelling koalas, is considered part of the price of keeping forests “safe” for houses, and properties.

Victoria is so cleared, and damaged, it’s like a tinder box, really to inflame more due to so-called “controlled burns” out of control.
A better way too would be to use leading-edge technology and communication to quickly spot fires and put them out! Controlled burning should be not based on hectares burnt, but by controlling where the risks to people are property are the greatest, and assessed by need.

 

Letter: The Age, 9 Oct, 2015

I am not aware of one instance in which a controlled or planned burn has subsequently stopped or slowed the progress of a bushfire.   From the present Lancefield disaster back to the fire  that devastated Wilsons Promontory, and further back, many controlled/planned burns have become out of control.  In addition,  the poor air quality in regional areas  caused by controlled or fuel-reduction burns   seriously affects the health of residents.   This ridiculous practice must cease.  The only basis for controlled burning is the desire of successive state governments to be seen to be doing something about bushfires.   Authorities need to focus on such things as the prevention of arson, the education of machinery operators, and the use of 21st-century technology to locate fires as soon as possible after they start, so that they may be extinguished quickly.  Where, during our bushfire season, are the large jet air tankers used in the  US? 

John Christiansen, St Kilda

PETITION: Immediate halt to planned burns – review fire management policies.

Share This:

Hunting Dingoes, Logging Koalas, Pounding Plovers, and Heeding Dr Seuss

On 26 October, the Andrews Government announced a ‘bounty’ system—members of the public will now be offered a reward of $120 for every dingo or wild dog killed.  There is deep concern over the impact of a bounty on Victoria’s threatened dingo populations, as well as potentially counterproductive impacts on livestock protection.
Dingoes and wild dogs were previously targeted strategically—in areas where farmers were experiencing stock loss problems. In contrast, the bounty system applies to very large areas—over half of the relevant public land in eastern Victoria is subject to the bounty—regardless of whether livestock protection is required.

The potential impacts of a bounty program are acknowledged, with departmental terms and conditions recognising:

-Dingoes often occur in areas inhabited by wild dogs, appear morphologically similar to wild dogs and are extremely difficult to differentiate from wild dogs. This means that wild dog control programs have the potential to directly impact on dingoes[i].

-The key issue is poorly informed members of the public unnecessarily killing dingoes and dingo hybrids and subsequent disruption of pack structures—believed to result in changes to territorial boundaries and increased risk of hybridisation and stock loss.

-The bounty system is fundamentally out-of-step with our changing understanding of the place of the dingo in the Australian landscape.
Historically, farmers viewed the dingo simply as a pest responsible for stock loss and associated financial and emotional stress. This perception was reflected in government regulations, where the dingo was classified as a pest to be killed or controlled across both public and private land.

cat_page_logo
More recently, understanding and evidence has grown to recognise the dingo as a top order predator in the Australian environment, providing an overall benefit to biodiversity and ecosystem function [ii]. Research indicates that dingoes can reduce fox and cat numbers, resulting in stronger, healthier populations of small native mammals, as well as regulating kangaroo numbers and their impact on native vegetation.

look_at_me_dad

(image: Wikimedian Commons: Look at me Dad https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Look_at_me_dad.jpg)

In 2008, the Victorian Labor Government listed the dingo as threatened. In consultation with a variety of stakeholders, the government catalysed a re-framing of the dingo’s place in Victorian ecosystems and set out a path to balance dingo conservation requirements and stock protection. This decision reflected a growing appreciation around the globe of the role of top predators in the environment, such as the reintroduction of the grey wolf to Yellowstone National Park in the United States [iii].
Then, in a damaging policy development, the subsequent Coalition Government introduced a bounty scheme on dingoes and wild dogs. The bounty was in place from 2011 to 2015, when a re-elected Labor Government abolished the bounty.
And now, in October 2016, we find the Minister for Agriculture, Jaala Pulford, reintroducing a dingo and wild dog bounty scheme. It is highly concerning the Environment Minister, Lily D’Ambrosio, who has responsibilities towards the conservation of Victoria’s dingoes, has not yet been seen on this issue.

Resolving this issue will require the engagement of both ministers and a balanced approach between dingo conservation and livestock protection, where education and information is provided across both management objectives. Allowing, or indeed encouraging, the public to kill wild dogs and dingoes on public land driven by livestock protection objectives is really only providing half the picture and is setting the dual dingo conservation/stock protection program on a path to failure.

It now appears the Andrews Government has lost its way, and is taking a regressive step towards failure for both dingo conservation and a balanced resolution of conservation and farming interests.
More information
https://theconversation.com/why-victorias-dingo-and-wild-dog-bounty-is-doomed-to-miss-its-target-66980
http://www.premier.vic.gov.au/new-advisory-group-on-wild-dogs-bigger-bounty/

[i] Terms and Conditions of Collecting the Bounty (2016) Agriculture Victoria website
http://agriculture.vic.gov.au/agriculture/pests-diseases-and-weeds/pest-animals/fox-bounty/terms-and-conditions-of-collecting-the-bounty Accessed 13 November 2016
[ii] Letnic M, Ritchie E and Dickman C (2011) Top predators as biodiversity regulators: the dingo Canis lipus dingo as a case study. Biological Reviews 87(2): 390-413

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-185X.2011.00203.x/full
[iii] Summary

http://www.yellowstonepark.com/wolf-reintroduction-changes-ecosystem/
– See more at: https://www.wilderness.org.au/articles/bounty-brings-uncontrolled-threat-victorias-dingoes#sthash.5bFiYrgo.dpuf

(featured image: Dingo Portrait at https://theconversation.com/the-australian-dingo-to-be-respected-at-a-distance-8320)

Share This:

1 17 18 19 20 21 37