During ‘shooting season’, South Australia’s picturesque wetlands — usually peaceful havens for our unique wildlife — are transformed into government-sanctioned killing fields. The result is decimated wetlands, and animals left to suffer with shattered bills and broken wings.
Sadly, the ‘lucky’ ones are those who are killed instantly. An estimated one out of every four birds shot will instead suffer for hours, days or even weeks before finally succumbing to their injuries; shattered bills, fractured limbs, and punctured organs.
The RSPCA SA estimated that during the 100-day 2023 season, up to 40,000 birds would be killed and up to 10,000 injured. Given it isn’t feasible to monitor every shooter across every wetland, the true number of individual birds who suffer will never be known.
Beyond this awful treatment of so-called ‘protected’ species, shooting can also endanger or kill other animals who were never intended as targets; birds incorrectly identified by shooters, young birds abandoned by parent birds who flee in fear or shorebirds who are prone to the stress of gunfire.