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Nearly half of Australia is largely untouched by Man, making it one of the biggest wildernesses in the world, ranking alongside the Amazon rainforest and Antarctica, a new study has found.
Three million square kilometres (1.1 million sq miles) — an area 12 times the size of mainland Britain — have been left pristine, according to the report for the Pew Environment Group and Nature Conservancy. Barry Traill, co-author of the study and director of the Wild Australia programme, said: “We were pleasantly surprised that there were still so many areas which came up in such good condition after 200 years of European settlement.”
The other two great remaining wilderness areas in the world are the Sahara and the northern Boreal forest in Canada.
“As the world’s last great wilderness areas disappear under pressure from human impact, to have a continent with this much remaining wilderness intact is unusual and globally significant,” Dr Traill added.
The study highlighted 12 regions in Australia, from the treeless Nullarbor Plain, which stretches across southern Australia, to the lush rainforests of Cape York in the far north. Although they were found to be rich in flora and fauna there was a high rate of extinction in some species.
Australia had the highest number of endemic mammal and reptile species in the world, Dr Traill said. Some species such as bilbies, rat kangaroos and bandicoots — generally small, ground-dwelling animals — are under threat from feral animals such as wild pigs and water buffalo, as well as from noxious weeds “causing well-documented losses of habitat and wildlife”, the study reported.
“In the past ten years there have been major declines \, especially with some species disappearing completely from particular areas,” Dr Traill said.
Australia has a total land mass of 2,988,902 sq miles (7.7 million sq km) and a population of about 21 million, most of whom live in the capital cities around the coast.
The areas of the Outback highlighted in the report were in central Australia and at the top of Queensland, regions that are predominantly unsettled or under the control of Aboriginal communities. Nearly a quarter of Australia is indigenous freehold land.
Aboriginal people have managed the wilderness land for thousands of years. Dr Traill said that they would need extra resources if they were to maintain the land more efficiently. Some plants such as the noxious weed mimosa, which was introduced by colonial settlers, were destroying the habitat and more help was needed to control them.
The solution to maintain the land, he said, was to provide more active management, such as training more indigenous rangers. There are currently 700 rangers but Dr Traill hopes to train and employ a further 4,300.
“You can have Aboriginal people who own these lands but don’t have the resources to look after them and manage them,” he said. “So one of the things we are getting in place is assisting these Aboriginal ranger groups to get more of them back into the country, into the remote areas, and looking after the land.”
He said that the Wild Australia programme, a collaborative project between the Pew Environment Group, which is based in Washington DC in the US, and the Nature Conservancy, would invest $A12 million (£6 million) — raised over three years from private, conservation-minded donors in the US — in maintaining the wilderness areas.
The money would go towards training indigenous rangers to look after the land, as well as buying properties such as cattle stations and turning them into conservation areas.
Dr Traill said: “These wild, natural areas are an important part of Australia’s heritage, they need to be actively managed.
“By marrying overseas resources with local expertise we aim to make a big difference in looking after our Outback.”
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I agree with Dr Traill. Aboriginal people need 'something to get up for". In other words, if they had a reason to get out of bed to do something they enjoy, not something a white man thinks they should be doing, they would be able to regain some of their pride and dignity.
Geoff Coote, Wedderburn, Australia
The idea that these rich and diverse cultural landscapes can be considered 'wilderness' adds insult to injury for Indigenous Australians, and is evidence of the continuing lack of recognition of their rights, western ethnocentricism, and the continuing appropriation of other peoples lands and lives.
Peter Whalley, Brisbane, Australia
Australian Aboriginals managed the landscape using fire much the same as Native Americans. The ignorant laws introduced by Spain prohibiting burning, in order to feed cows has backfired. American forests now have such massive fuel load of detritus, that fires are now catastrophic.
Mike, Sacramento, USA
How can you say that half of Australia is untouched by man.With the arrival of Aboriginals thousanda of years ago,the land has been altered.From day one the Aboriginals used fire to create grassland from forests to make hunting easier.
But then , are the Aboriginals still seen as fauna .
Russell Leslie, Perth, Australia
It is very important for more resources to be provided to Indgenous Australians to better manage these areas of high ecological importance - but this shows that it is inaccurate to suggest the land is "untouched". It has been sustainably 'touched' for thousands of years.
Andrew, Brisbane, Australia
And Damien, mate, the vast majority of Australians are descended from immigrants who came to the country in the last 150 years, not from British convicts.
Andrew, Brisbane, Australia
Most Australians are descended from convicts. That's a fact.
Damien, Birmingham, UK
Australia has many similarities with Canada in regards to demographics.Whether vast areas of these countries is inhabitable or not is in certain respects irrelevant.Growing up in these countries provides people with a totally different perspective on life as compared to a European.Space,Space,Space.
Ed Allen, Whitby, Canada
Rachel, you're wrong.
Man is short for 'mankind' if you like. What about 'tiger', 'duck', 'lion' etc.,etc.?
Alan Sparke, ST REMY, France
" Nearly half of Australia untouched by man" - Bill Bryson said this in his book "Down Under" published in 2001 . . .
Neil, Rugby, UK
"Half of Australia untouched by humans".
Don't tell the humans that. Now they will go and spoil it!
Paul Hunt, Macclesfield, UK
untouchable = uninhabitable. the parts that are worth living in are bursting at the seams and now unable to cope with the numbers of people living there. immigration to this country should end immediately.
tim, NSW, AUS
Untouched because it is untouchable yes true. But I fell in love with Australia at first sight, even if I would never ever live in Alice Springs!!! Most of its charme, indeed, resides in its being so big and so "empty", doesn't it. Italy: 300.000 square meters shared by 60 million of us. Love Aussie
Lory, Belforte, Italy
Rachel, maybe stick to lipstick and perfume, Emma - have you actually bothered to see any of the wilderness areas of your country at all? yes it is uninhabitable by European standards but native people have lived successfully all over the (uninhabitable) continent for the last 40000 years
Richard, Glasgow, UK
"Half of outback untouched by man" was the link I clicked on. I thought this would be an article about the 'man drought' and its effects on the female population.
Instead I find it's about less interesting wilderness areas.
Accuracy in subediting PLEASE. Human means human. Man means man.
Rachel, London,
As Emma says, having flown over Australia a few times and travelled around, it is mostly desert and uninhabitable except for those who want to escape civilisation. But the other parts on the coasts more than make up for the poor areas though and the Aussies are great.
B J Deller, Marbella, Spain
The only reason it is so untouched is because so much of it is basically uninhabitable. I don't know many people who want to live in the middle of a desert with limited access to healthcare and basic services.
Emma, Aussie living in London, UK
Well at least something Europeans didn't destroy in Australia.
Mario, Birmingham, UK