ALMOST 400 wild goats, along with more than 40 other feral pests, have been killed in an aerial cull conducted from a helicopter near Wyangala Dam.
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Central Tablelands Local Land Services and the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) teamed up with private landholders to conduct the cull in inaccessible country where feral pests which are difficult to reach to conduct trapping and baiting programs.
The campaign targeted the 20,000-hectare Abercrombie River reserve, along with land on six private properties stretching across an additional 13,500 hectares.
MAP: Where the program was undertaken …
The two-day aerial cull enabled the removal a large number of destructive pests from the landscape, included 34 pigs, 373 goats, seven deer, and one fox.
Local Land Services’ Casey Proctor said that represented a “fantastic result”.
“Central Tablelands Local Land Services funded the helicopter cull to support ongoing baiting and trapping programs, building on the hard work that’s already been done by landholders and pest animal groups on the ground,” Mr Proctor said.
“We worked together closely to coordinate pest control activities, and the baiting and trapping programs are more successful when supported by the cross tenure aerial cull,” he said.
Pigs in particular have been breeding up in areas of dense blackberry infestation in the higher reaches of the small creeks that drain into the Abercrombie River and Reedy Creek.
Local Land Services and NPWS conduct winter pig control trapping programs that are complemented by the aerial cull.
Neville Collins from the Central Tablelands Local Land Services biosecurity team has been helping landholders to install traps and supply feed wheat for use as bait.
"The dryer times have been ideal opportunity to control pig numbers using traps," Mr Collins said.
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