·Environment Editor
12 September 2022·3-min read
WARNING — DISTURBING CONTENT: Two NSW photographers were “gobsmacked” after the herd of brumbies they had been documenting were found gunned down on Sunday.
Cooma couple Michelle and Ian Brown had regularly shared pictures of the small group of horses to their 72,000 followers on Facebook.
Eleven animals were found at Kosciuszko National Park with bullet holes in their heads and bodies in circumstances Ms Brown describes as “horrific”.
At least three of the mares were pregnant at the time of death and had spontaneously aborted their foals after the shooting. Ms Brown had only just photographed them a week before the incident.
“We’ve been literally photographing these horses for four or five years. We’ve watched them grow up since they were babies,” she told Yahoo News Australia.
“It’s devastating to us. They were our horses. They’ve grown up with us, they know us and we’ve followed them every step of the way.”
Ms Brown said she was aware culling was underway on the Victorian side of the alps, but she believed control methods in NSW were largely limited to trapping.
She’s now calling on authorities to investigate and provide answers following what she describes as a “calculated attack” on her beloved horses.
Why are brumbies being removed from Kosciuszko?
National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) confirmed it is “implementing wild horse control” within the park, as part of a plan it says balances heritage with conservation.
“All control measures under the plan are required to meet the highest possible animal welfare standards. These standards are being met,” a NPWS spokesperson said.
NPWS did not verify whether it was responsible for the cull, and cited a policy of not releasing details of specific operations.
Brumby management continues to be a highly contentious issue in NSW and Victoria, and NPWS said withholding information helps protect its staff, contractors and visitors, as well as the welfare of wild horses.
- Campaign to save Gouldian finches from developers
- Australia given F grade for extinction prevention
- Witness horrified as Japan resumes dolphin hunting
A 2020 count estimated there were 14,380 wild horses within Kosciuszko, and NPWS has a plan to reduce their population to 3000 by June 2027, retaining them in just 32 per cent of the park.
The plan prioritises passive trapping and rehoming, but it does allow for on-ground shooting, although aerial culling is not permitted.
NPWS maintains concerns about the damage horses do to fragile ecosystems within the park, including their impact on threatened species like corroboree frogs, the smoky mouse and the broad-toothed rat.
It points to scientific studies which found the horses are “causing significant negative impact”, resulting in erosion and the trampling of habitat.
Comment by Nelle- the lies that keep coming astound me-let me list a few truths-it is a known fact horses do not harm the ecosystem quite the opposite-in fact enhance it -do not harm or kill other wildlife-they are continuing to aerial shoot these horses which is extreme cruelty as we speak regardless of what is being stated by govt-people who go regularly to the mountains find evidence of this – 14,000 horses? pie in the sky what with continual shooting, and bush fire losses the numbers are very low-this information is out there on the net and there for anyone -govt and parks bank on the fact that people won’t bother and just believe what they are saying and anyone with nous should know that you cannot believe anything that comes out of the mouths of politicians or bureaucrats