
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The population of feral rabbits is booming — resisting control efforts from traditional hunting measures to infection with the calicivirus.
The vermin cost Australian farmers an estimated 200-million dollars in lost production each year — roughly 10 times the losses caused by fox or mice. That's not counting the damage to native animals and plants.
Now experts warn the country lacks a virus capable of curbing the spread of the animals.
By ABC Australia4
1313 ratings
The population of feral rabbits is booming — resisting control efforts from traditional hunting measures to infection with the calicivirus.
The vermin cost Australian farmers an estimated 200-million dollars in lost production each year — roughly 10 times the losses caused by fox or mice. That's not counting the damage to native animals and plants.
Now experts warn the country lacks a virus capable of curbing the spread of the animals.

85 Listeners

89 Listeners

57 Listeners

14 Listeners

19 Listeners

45 Listeners

11 Listeners

3 Listeners

19 Listeners

29 Listeners

91 Listeners

53 Listeners

66 Listeners

8 Listeners

18 Listeners

8 Listeners

11 Listeners

351 Listeners

10 Listeners

155 Listeners

10 Listeners

78 Listeners

26 Listeners

128 Listeners

183 Listeners

4 Listeners

69 Listeners

2 Listeners

61 Listeners

6 Listeners