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Home / Environment / Pigs Devastate Ancient Bunya Pines & Sacred Sites

Pigs Devastate Ancient Bunya Pines & Sacred Sites

30 Nov

•

Summary

  • Feral pigs spread deadly dieback disease to ancient bunya pines.
  • The trees hold immense cultural significance for Indigenous Australians.
  • Invasive pigs cause widespread ecological damage across Australia.
Pigs Devastate Ancient Bunya Pines & Sacred Sites

Ancient bunya pine forests in South-East Queensland are succumbing to a devastating dieback disease, with feral pigs identified as a primary catalyst for its worsening spread. These invasive animals, attracted by the bunya nuts, trample through infected soil, spreading the Phytophthora pathogen and weakening the trees.

The bunya pines hold deep cultural and historical significance for Indigenous Australians, having served as gathering places for ceremonies and disputes for millennia. Their destruction by disease and invasive species represents a loss of living heritage.

Nationwide, feral pigs cause extensive ecological disruption, impacting native wildlife, eroding waterways, and damaging sacred sites. While complete eradication is unlikely, targeted control efforts are being urged to protect vulnerable ecosystems and cultural heritage across Australia.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Bunya dieback is a disease caused by Phytophthora, a water mould that attacks tree roots. Feral pigs spread it by digging in infected soil and moving the pathogen to new areas.
Bunya pines were historically vital gathering places for Indigenous tribes for ceremonies, disputes, and celebrations, making them significant living heritage sites.
Feral pigs contribute to erosion, damage waterways and platypus habitats, destroy sacred rock art sites, and threaten sea turtle nesting grounds.

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