
Establishment
of the Australia-Japan Wildlife Conservation and Education
Foundation
@
Considerable time has passed since the first reports of the
effects on animals stemming from the world-wide destruction
of the environment and ecosystems caused by urbanisation and
other by-products of the development of modern society.
Despite efforts to address this, however, this destruction
continues unabated, resulting in the loss of wild animal
habitat, the extinction of some species and a fall in the
numbers of other species to dangerously low levels.
In
Australia also, more than 50 species of animals are known to
have become extinct since colonisation of the continent
approximately 200 years ago. The number of species presently
endangered, or likely to become endangered in the future has
reached 370, one example being that of the Northern
Hairy-nosed Wombat of which there are now just approximately
130 in the Epping Forest National Park. Isolated from other
continents for millions of years, the Australian continent
has many animals that have evolved in a unique fashion,
including marsupials, such as koalas and kangaroos, and the
monotremes – the echidna and platypus - that cannot be found
anywhere else on earth. In many instances, the extinction of
an Australian animal means its disappearance from the planet
as a whole. As such, these animals are not just important to
Australia, but are the treasures of the world.
Despite
an area some 21 times that of Japan, Australia has a
population of only 21 million, less than that of the Greater
Tokyo Area. This makes it difficult for Australia alone to
protect the animals that inhabit the vast countryside. How
wonderful it would be to gain the understanding and support
of the people of Japan, who have a strong friendship with
Australia, in protecting these animals. I am certain that in
the future, with a broader circle of international
cooperation and better protection of the global environment
and ecosystems based on a concept of the coexistence of
humans and nature, mankind as a whole will also experience
greater prosperity.
In
closing, it is my sincere hope that there will also be
further exchanges between the people of Australia and Japan
through wildlife conservation activities in the spirit of
mutual understanding and respect, leading to the further
strengthening of ties between the two nations.
Australia-Japan Wildlife Conservation and Education
Foundation
Tetsuo Mizuno DVM, PhD
Executive Director & CEO
@
PhD in
Veterinary Science, former Research Fellow in the School of
Veterinary Science, University of Queensland, Chief
Scientist and Consultant, HerdVac Pty., Ltd. (a spin-off
company established by the University of Queensland))
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