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STOP ANIMAL CRUELTY
Australia’s Fraser Island Dingoes - Victims of Greed
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The images
in the following program
are highly sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However, we have to
show the truth about
cruelty to animals,
praying that
you will help to stop it.
I keep fighting
as hard as I can to give
these precious animals
a voice, because
within 10 years we will
not see any dingoes left
on Fraser Island.
This is
the Stop Animal Cruelty
series on
Supreme Master Television.
On today’s program,
wildlife photographer and
artist Jennifer Parkhurst
and animal advocate
Jaylene Musgrave
will discuss the cruel fate
of the dingoes
on Fraser Island,
Queensland, off the coast
of eastern Australia.
The iconic dingo,
a beautiful, intelligent
and noble wild dog,
was once found
in every state of Australia
except the island
of Tasmania.
However,
as a result of habitat loss,
interbreeding
with domestic dogs,
intentional poisoning,
shooting and state culling,
their numbers
have severely declined.
Fraser Island has
Australia’s
largest population
of purebred dingoes,
and these remaining
50 to 80 individuals
sadly face extinction.
Ms. Parkhurst,
also known as
the “Dingo Whisperer,”
has spent seven years
observing, photographing
and painting the regal
dingoes of Fraser Island.
And Ms. Musgrave
is the founder
of the Vegan Warriors,
an organization based in
the Sunshine Coast region
of Queensland,
comprised of rock stars
and other celebrity vegans
who work diligently
to raise awareness about
animal cruelty, including
the inhumane treatment
of the island’s dingoes.
Australia is the only place
in the world
that you can find dingoes.
And we have some of
the last purebred dingoes
in Australia in Queensland.
The emotional life
of dingoes is what
makes them so special.
They’re a very
family-oriented animal.
And just the way that they
interact with each other,
it’s really clear that
they do have emotions
and that they do care
about each other.
Also, dingoes are unique
as far as wild animals go
in that they have a long
history of companionship
with people.
They like companionship
with each other.
It doesn’t matter
what the weather is,
how hot it is
or anything like that,
they always snuggle up
close together when they’re
having their daily naps.
People
from all over the world
travel to Fraser Island
for its beautiful location
and beautiful views
and also
because of the dingoes.
Ironically,
it is the tourist industry
which is killing
the very dingoes
they have come to see.
Because dingoes closely
resemble domestic dogs,
many visitors believe
they can treat them
just like they treat
their companion animals
back home, and this creates
an unsafe situation
for the dingoes.
Well, if you compare
the situation we have
on Fraser Island
to something like Africa,
where you have
wildlife safaris or
wildlife nature reserves
where there's wild animals,
you don’t walk up
to a lion and try and pet it.
You don’t walk up
to a bear in Canada
in the wild
and try and feed it
an apple or something.
When you go to the island,
the rangers are
very clear about
(what) you’re not to do
with the dingoes.
And everyone is given
these instructions and
told to adhere to them,
or you could face a fine.
(But) so many people don’t,
because they think
they’re dogs.
They’re not dogs.
They’re wild animals.
And people then feed them
or try and pet them.
The dingo is probably
starving and the dingo
may attack that person.
And when that happens,
the dingo is the one
that suffers ultimately.
Whenever any dingo
on Fraser Island
acts in a manner
considered to be
dangerous or threatening,
he’s either tagged
on the ear or murdered.
And because of their
playful, boisterous natures,
dingo puppies become
victims of tourism.
The dingo
is very misunderstood.
They’re a gregarious,
boisterous, playful animal.
The way that
they play with each other,
it’s nipping, biting,
bowling each other over,
playing games of chase
and so forth.
Most of the animals
that are destroyed
on Fraser Island
are pups, 95% or more.
And it’s
puppy play behavior
that they are exhibiting
when they’re running up
to people.
Now people have been told
that the dingo is running
after them to attack them,
so they behave
the wrong way.
And you’re really
not supposed
to engage them in play.
So people just panic
and they don’t realize
they’re playing anyway.
The dingoes might nip
or bite somebody,
but it’s just like
an invitation to play.
In 2008,
1.8 meter-high fences,
some electrified, were
erected on Fraser Island
to keep the dingoes away
from townships and areas
most frequently visited
by tourists.
But unfortunately,
the fences also
separate the animals
from their food sources,
so many have become
emaciated and weak,
and the more vulnerable,
the puppies and elderly,
frequently starve to death.
One morning,
I’d got up early again
and I was out, following
this little fellow around.
He was
a six months old pup.
One of his siblings
had already perished.
And he was
so frail and fragile,
his hips were protruding,
and he couldn’t walk
properly.
They get very stiff
in the hind legs when
they’re that starving.
And so I’d been
following him.
He was eating berries
off the grass.
And I just thought,
“Oh, you poor little thing.
You’re going to die
any day now.”
Because these helpless
and innocent animals
are believed to interfere
with the lucrative
tourist industry, even
the few remaining dingoes
are treated with savagery.
If park rangers consider
a dingo to be a hazard,
they may pelt him
with clay pellets
using a slingshot,
shoot him with a gun,
bait him
with poisonous food,
or put a tag in his ear.
They’ve given rangers
the right to shoot them
with guns and to haze them
to scare them away.
This can result in a dingo
being injured, which
could lead to them dying.
They've baited many,
many puppies as well.
They’ve just baited them
because they thought
they might grow up
to attack someone.
When a dingo picks up
the bait and dies,
that affects
the whole structure of
the social unit or the pack.
The young pups
actually learn from
the older dingoes
on how to behave,
on their place in that pack.
And when that particular
animal is taken away,
it then affects
the rest of the pack.
And they can become
quite aggressive
because they haven’t got
the alpha male
or the strong female
in the pack to teach them
the correct way that
they need to be in that pack.
These animals
are very intelligent
and they know
what they’re doing.
And we’re just disturbing
the whole way that
they are acting naturally.
The tag can cause
an ear infection and/or
make the ear flop thereby
impeding the ability
to determine where
sounds are coming from.
Tagging involves
trapping the animal,
with the possibility
of the dingo’s legs
becoming injured
or broken.
They’re trapped,
so they have the scent
of the trap and
the trauma of the trapping,
they’re DNA tested.
They’re tagged.
Most of the time they’re
given some sort of drug.
It paralyzes them.
So they’ve got
all this human scent
all over them,
and then they’re returned
to the pack
without being sanitized.
And of course
the rest of the pack
doesn’t like that because
he’s got that horrible smell
all about him.
And the incidents
that happened over there
where people are attacked,
the dingoes have now
got tags in their ears.
And anyone
that knows dingoes’ ears,
their ears stick right up
like that, and they’re
very important to a dingo
to be able to hear.
And with a tag in his ears
it means that one of
his ears will droop down.
So it’s like they’ve got
no chance whatsoever.
They’ve been cut off
from their food sources
and then we've put
this whopping great big
ear tag in their ear,
which means
that they can’t even hear.
So, the rangers
more often than not
will shoot the wrong dog
when an attack’s
been reported.
There's an incident
that happened
a couple weeks ago,
and the rangers
can’t even confirm
that the two dingoes
they put down
were the dingoes
that actually attacked
the person on the island.
Dingoes are
one of Australia’s
national treasures.
What can be done to
save their precious lives?
I think the best thing
to do is to educate people
on the nature and
the character of the dingo,
to let people understand
that they’re not coming
after them to attack them,
that they really just
do want company.
And what happens is
once a dingo
settles down and stops
all that play behavior,
he’s just happy
to sit down next to you
for a couple of hours
or whatever.
He just likes company.
I think if there were
feeding stations
for the dingoes, that
would be a better idea.
So that the tourists could
come and see the dingoes
and photograph them
without actually interacting
too closely with them.
I think the feeding stations
have been experimented
with overseas as well
in different wildlife parks,
and they've worked
quite well.
In Yellowstone
National Park (USA)
for example they have
random food drops
when the food supply’s
in a bit of crisis.
We could implement
something like that,
a random food drop,
so that the dingoes
aren’t necessarily
looking for food
from people.
Here are some
final thoughts about
the endangered dingoes
from Jaylene Musgrave
and Jennifer Parkhurst.
I don’t really think
that it’s the dingoes
that are the problem.
I think
that human interaction
is the problem.
Any peak holiday season,
the island is just overrun
with tourists who think
that they can play
with the wild animals.
And this is, in turn,
leading to attacks.
I think that the dingoes
need to be given back
the land that was theirs.
And we need
to stop building
more resorts on there.
We need to stop taking
what is rightfully
the dingoes’
and let them be able to
act as wild animals.
People need to know
really that they’re going
to see dingoes and it’s
not a situation for panic.
It’s a wonderful thing.
They’re so blessed
to be able to see
a wild animal like that,
just while they’re out
and about and having
a picnic with their family
or just whatever
they’re doing.
So yes, education,
stop the fear campaign
Just let people
enjoy the dingoes
and not be frightened.
Many thanks
Jennifer Parkhurst
and Jaylene Musgrave
for your efforts
to raise awareness
about the heartless
and cruel treatment
of the innocent,
dignified dingoes.
We pray
that the population of
these remarkable wild dogs
will steadily grow
in the near future,
as humanity learns to
live in greater harmony
with all beings on Earth.
For more information
on today’s guests,
please visit
the following websites:
Jennifer Parkhurst
www.FraserIslandFootprints.com
Jaylene Musgrave
www.EdenHandMadeChocolate.com.au
Thank you
for joining us today
on Stop Animal Cruelty.
Next on
Supreme Master
Television is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May all people and animals
on our planet enjoy lives
of freedom and dignity.
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