2022
DOI: 10.1071/pc21037
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Poor welfare outcomes resulting from poor management decisions in a translocation of western grey kangaroos (Macropus fuliginosus)

Abstract: There is often considerable social media commentary on whether remnant kangaroo populations in urban areas should be euthanased or translocated. Here, we describe a translocation program in Western Australia where kangaroos were herded into a temporary enclosure, darted, sedated, and translocated to a site in the State Forest east of the Swan Coastal Plain where they were released after 24 h. Prior to darting and after being initially herded into a temporary holding enclosure, kangaroos were repeatedly release… Show more

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“…Of non-lethal options, translocation and fertility control are generally supported for kangaroo management (Drijfhout et al 2020). Only two translocations of kangaroos have been adequately monitored and documented; both recorded low survival and high dispersal rates after release (Higginbottom and Page 2010;Cowan et al 2020;Thompson et al 2023), suggesting that translocation is not an effective or humane option for kangaroo management.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of non-lethal options, translocation and fertility control are generally supported for kangaroo management (Drijfhout et al 2020). Only two translocations of kangaroos have been adequately monitored and documented; both recorded low survival and high dispersal rates after release (Higginbottom and Page 2010;Cowan et al 2020;Thompson et al 2023), suggesting that translocation is not an effective or humane option for kangaroo management.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%