Dingos
The Dingo is Australia's only native canid and Australia's largest mammal carnivore. While considered a native species, dingos were actually introduced to Australia, probably by Asian seafarers, about 4,000 years ago.
While the classic image of a dingo is sandy in colour, dingos actually come in a variety of coat colours including ginger, brown, brindle and black.
As apex predators, dingos play an important role in Australia's ecosystem, assisting to keep other populations in control. Despite being protected as native species, dingos can be legally hunted and killed as part of government programs.
The most common methods of killing dingos are shooting and poisoning, usually with the controversial poison 1080.
2022 Dingo Trapping investigation
Native dingoes are being trapped and killed around Australia as part of a misguided and unnecessary program of population control. In 2022, hidden camerasshowed distressed dingoes struggling and crying before being shot with a rifle by the trapper.
The Victorian Government pays for 173 dingo traps to be set every day (daily average of the 2022-23 "wild dog management plan"), largely in an effort to protect the profits of sheep and cattle farmers who claim that dingoes prey on farmed animals, particularly young sheep and cows. However, studies show that 80% of the 10 million lambs who die before they reach weaning age in Australia, do so due to poor animal welfare, and selective breeding practices. Only 7%-8% of lamb mortalities can be attributed to predators such as dingoes, with one study suggesting it could account for as little as 0.12%. Often, the mortalities attributed to dingoes were animals who had already died of other causes.
In their mission to protect sheep and cows long enough to slaughter them for profit, this deceptive framing by animal agriculture industries has painted dingoes as villains. In reality, as Australia's only native canid, dingoes play a vital role in maintaining ecological balance. Dingoes are incorrectly labeled as 'wild dogs' by Australian meat, leather and wool producers to justify unnecessary programs of slaughter, which include trapping, baiting (including the use of the controversial and ruthless 1080 poison) and bounty programs which reward trappers for every dingo killed.
Killing dingoes through baiting, trapping and shooting causes cascading ecological harm. Dingoes pass on knowledge to their young, meaning that when humans kill the parents or mature dingoes of a pack, young dingoes won't learn the skills to survive, making them more likely to hunt easier prey, including lambs and calves. In effect, lethal dingo control increases the likelihood of the very problem it's designed to prevent, making it nothing more than gratuitous cruelty paid for directly by our government.
Regardless of the method of killing, no dingo deserves to be slaughtered in the name of protecting industry profits.
The investigation followed a trapper named David, employed by the Victorian Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP), in the forests surrounding the town of Mansfield, Victoria. After gathering enough evidence of the cruelty involved, investigators were able to rescue a trapped dingo and relocate him to an interstate sanctuary.

