Let the Desert Breathe:
Demand National Buffel Grass Action
Across the heart of our continent, a dull straw-green tide is taking over. Buffel grass, tjanpi kura (bad grass), mamu tjanpi (devil grass) is transforming our deserts into dangerous monocultures that burn hotter, faster, and more often. It’s spreading through songlines and sacred sites, choking waterways, and leaving dust where there was once life.
Across the heart of our continent, a dull straw-green tide is taking over. It’s a tide that threatens the world’s oldest living culture, our unique desert wildlife, and the very health of Country itself.
That tide is buffel grass, tjanpi kura (bad grass), mamu tjanpi (devil grass) and it’s transforming our deserts into dangerous monocultures that burn hotter, faster, and more often.
In Central Australia, buffel grass now covers hundreds of kilometres of Country.
It’s spreading through songlines and sacred sites, choking waterways, and leaving dust where there was once life.
Buffel grass was first proposed as a Key Threatening Process more than a decade ago. But no action followed – and in that time, the invasive weed has continued to spread unchecked.
We need you to call on Minister Murray Watt (Environment) and Minister Julie Collins (Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry) to take immediate national action to:
✅ Recognise buffel grass as a Weed of National Significance
✅ List buffel as a Key Threatening Process under national law
✅ Fund a national buffel coordinator and develop an action plan, including research, regional planning, and on-ground control to restore and protect arid ecosystems.
Australia’s deserts are alive – but not for long if we let buffel grass smother them.
Join us in calling for urgent national leadership to stop this invasion before it’s too late.
Sign the petition now to protect Country, culture, and wildlife from buffel grass.
It will only take a minute.
Read the UMUWA statement on buffel grass.
Cover image: Tidewater Teddy
Send an email to Environment Minister Murray Watt and Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Minister Julie Collins today.
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