Road Killed Eastern Grey Kangaroo near Quirindi in NSW, Australia |
In Australia, there are few limitations on the hunting of non-native species. Rabbits, cats, feral dogs, feral horses, feral donkeys, feral pigs, feral goats, foxes, camels, wild cattle, and water buffalo can be taken with few regulatory limitations. Deer have some limitations on the calibers that may be used. Game can be shot with spotlights and from vehicles.
The shooting of Kangaroos, on the other hand, is highly regulated, and requires numerous different types of permits and licenses. Kangaroos maintain high populations and are agricultural pests in large areas of Australia. In New South Wales, near Quirindi, road killed Eastern Grey Kangaroos are about as common as road killed deer in Wisconsin.
The shooting of kangaroos is regulated as to what position the animal must be in when shot (standing), where the animal may be shot (brain shots only), what calibers may be used (centerfire only, .204 Ruger and up), the range they may be shot at (less than 200 meters), and of course, who may shoot them (licensed commercial shooters and primary producers). Farmers are the most common primary producers. Commercial shooters need to apply for permits and numbered tags. Primary producers need to apply for a permit to shoot kangaroos that are damaging crops. Farmers are granted permission to shoot limited numbers of kangaroos. When the number is reached, they can apply for another permit.
Telescopic sights are required for rifles. Semi-automatic rifles may not be used. Some use of shotguns in special circumstances is allowed in South Australia. Rifles are required to be sighted on a non-animated target before each day's or night's hunting. Subsonic ammunition may not be used.
The regulations for shooting kangaroos commercially for meat and skins differ a little from shooting non-commercially for damage control and mitigation. There does not appear to be any allowance for shooting kangaroos by sport hunters.
In the United States, the regulations for most game vary considerably by state. In Australia, the regulations for kangaroo shooting varies a little bit by state, but is mostly controlled by national codes of practice. The codes of practice were formulated by the Natural Resource Management Council. All states follow the guidelines.
The United States has analogous regulation in the Federal requirements for hunting migratory birds. Australians may think the U.S. steel shot limitations and multitudinous rules for hunting waterfowl to be as peculiar as the fine detail in the kangaroos shooting regulation seems to Americans. Australians likely think United States protection of feral horses and burros to be bizarre. Feral horses and burros are introduced species that do significant damage to the native ecology.
For most hunting other than for kangaroos, Australia is far less regulated than the United States.
1 comment:
Its can't be that hard to regulate if you have the ridiculous amount of gun grabbers running around that the Aussies do. a friend Of mine could not find a wild horse on her 528,000 acre ranch any where so she went and bought 200 head and turned them loose. shoot one of her horses and she could find a place to bury you. the ranch is so big and so old it has its own grave yard. the oldest grave marker I saw was dated 1536. Indian Russell, a well known prospector Isn't buried in that grave yard. He picked a spot before he died, on a hill top. left a curse on his grave . He had everything he owned buried with him. a silver saddle, several guns and all the gold he had left. He had a gold vein No one ever found. He would leave town and come back in a week or two with slivers of gold he hacked out of the vein with an axe. He paid all of his bills with the gold slivers.
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