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), Mama Tjunpi (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), Mama Tjunpi (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 wild buffel as a Key Threatening Process under national law
Fund a coordinated national 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.

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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To:
The Hon. Murray Watt, Minister for the Environment and The Hon. Julie Collins, Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry,

Across the heart of this continent, our arid and semi-arid lands are being swallowed by a dull, straw-green tide. This tide is a threat to the planet’s longest surviving culture, it is a growing public health risk, an environmental disaster, economic burden, and it is dividing communities. This straw-green tide is buffel grass, it is Tjanpi kura (bad grass), it is Mama Tjunpi (devil grass), and it is not only changing the landscape, it’s changing life itself.

In central Australia - buffel grass is everywhere it should not be, a weed occupying hundreds of kilometres, fracturing landscapes that hold songlines and sacred sites. It chokes waterways and ceremony places, leaving dust where there was once life.

Grasslands invaded with buffel have five times more fuel than the native grasslands. It grows back faster and displaces native desert grass and flowers. Native trees that have stood for centuries and wildlife that have walked this Country long before we, are being wiped out at a pace that it cannot naturally regenerate. The seeds and smoke it produces contribute to asthma and respiratory problems, posing a growing risk to those who live on and care for Country.

Buffel grass is linked to the decline of over 30 nationally listed threatened species. Bush foods, medicines, and native plants are disappearing, limiting the ability to practice and pass down traditional knowledge. The witchetty bush for instance, once a marker of food and life, is suffocating beneath it. The transformation of diverse landscapes into buffel monocultures and the loss of native plants and wildlife is threatening the landscape's ecological balance. The loss of culturally significant species breaks connections that have sustained First Nations identity and Lore for millennia. It also deeply saddens communities who have been custodians of this Country for thousands of years, fought for decades to have it returned, and are now fighting to restore the health of place and the health of people.

Managing buffel has placed a heavy burden on land care groups, Indigenous rangers, and individual community members. Some rise before dawn to pull buffel by hand, driven by love for Country and grief for what’s being lost. This is a multifaceted burden of resources that simultaneously diverts energy and attention from fulfilling other cultural and environmental priorities for those stretched by fighting this endless tide of buffel.

Buffel was first proposed as a Key Threatening Process in 2012, but the listing never came. In the years since, it has continued to spread unchecked, changing landscapes faster than anyone can heal them. Between those who depend on it to make a living, and those fighting to manage it so future generations can live, it is not one against the other, buffel can be both a pastoral feed and a devastating invader. If we can find unity in facing it, across communities, industries, and governments, the desert might heal enough to breathe again.

We demand the Australian Government recognise and act on this significant invasive species and:

  • Recognise it is a Weed of National Significance
  • List wild buffel as a Key Threatening Process
  • Fund a national action plan with coordination for buffel research, planning and on the ground action

Please take immediate national action to manage and control buffel grass across Australia's ecologically threatened arid zones.

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Your gift is a lifeline for nature.

Our protected areas are being trashed, trampled, choked and polluted by an onslaught of invaders. Invasive species are already the overwhelming driver of our animal extinction rate, and are expected to cause 75 of the next 100 extinctions.

But you can help to turn this around and create a wildlife revival in Australia. 

From numbats to night parrots, a tax-deductible donation today can help defend our wildlife against the threat of invasive weeds, predators, and diseases.

As the only national advocacy environment group dedicated to stopping this mega threat, your gift will make a big difference.

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A silent crisis is unfolding across Australia. Every year, billions of native animals are hunted and killed by cats and foxes. Fire ants continue to spread and threaten human health. And the deadly strain of bird flu looms on the horizon. Your donation today will be used to put the invasive species threat in the media, make invasive species a government priority, ensure governments take rapid action to protect nature and our remarkable native wildlife from invasives-led extinction, death and destruction.

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    Dear Project Team,

    [YOUR PERSONALISED MESSAGE WILL APPEAR HERE.] 

    I support the amendment to the Kosciuszko National Park Wild Horse Heritage Management Plan to allow our incredible National Parks staff to use aerial shooting as one method to rapidly reduce feral horse numbers. I want to see feral horse numbers urgently reduced in order to save the national park and our native wildlife that live there.

    The current approach is not solving the problem. Feral horse numbers have rapidly increased in Kosciuszko National Park to around 18,000, a 30% jump in just the past 2 years. With the population so high, thousands of feral horses need to be removed annually to reduce numbers and stop our National Park becoming a horse paddock. Aerial shooting, undertaken humanely and safely by professionals using standard protocols, is the only way this can happen.

    The government’s own management plan for feral horses states that ‘if undertaken in accordance with best practice, aerial shooting can have the lowest negative animal welfare impacts of all lethal control methods’.

    This humane and effective practice is already used across Australia to manage hundreds of thousands of feral animals like horses, deer, pigs, and goats.

    Trapping and rehoming of feral horses has been used in Kosciuszko National Park for well over a decade but has consistently failed to reduce the population, has delayed meaningful action and is expensive. There are too many feral horses in the Alps and not enough demand for rehoming for it to be relied upon for the reduction of the population.

    Fertility control as a management tool is only effective for a small, geographically isolated, and accessible population of feral horses where the management outcome sought is to maintain the population at its current size. It is not a viable option to reduce the large and growing feral horse population in the vast and rugged terrain of Kosciuszko National Park.

    Feral horses are trashing and trampling our sensitive alpine ecosystems and streams, causing the decline and extinction of native animals. The federal government’s Threatened Species Scientific Committee has stated that feral horses ‘may be the crucial factor that causes final extinction’ for 12 alpine species.

    I recognise the sad reality that urgent and humane measures are necessary to urgently remove the horses or they will destroy the Snowies and the native wildlife that call the mountains home. I support a healthy national park where native species like the Corroboree Frog and Mountain Pygmy Possum can thrive.

    Kind regards,
    [Your name]
    [Your email address]
    [Your postcode]


    Dear Project Team,

    [YOUR PERSONALISED MESSAGE WILL APPEAR HERE.] 

    I support the amendment to the Kosciuszko National Park Wild Horse Heritage Management Plan to allow our incredible National Parks staff to use aerial shooting as one method to rapidly reduce feral horse numbers. I want to see feral horse numbers urgently reduced in order to save the national park and our native wildlife that live there.

    The current approach is not solving the problem. Feral horse numbers have rapidly increased in Kosciuszko National Park to around 18,000, a 30% jump in just the past 2 years. With the population so high, thousands of feral horses need to be removed annually to reduce numbers and stop our National Park becoming a horse paddock. Aerial shooting, undertaken humanely and safely by professionals using standard protocols, is the only way this can happen.

    The government’s own management plan for feral horses states that ‘if undertaken in accordance with best practice, aerial shooting can have the lowest negative animal welfare impacts of all lethal control methods’.

    This humane and effective practice is already used across Australia to manage hundreds of thousands of feral animals like horses, deer, pigs, and goats.

    Trapping and rehoming of feral horses has been used in Kosciuszko National Park for well over a decade but has consistently failed to reduce the population, has delayed meaningful action and is expensive. There are too many feral horses in the Alps and not enough demand for rehoming for it to be relied upon for the reduction of the population.

    Fertility control as a management tool is only effective for a small, geographically isolated, and accessible population of feral horses where the management outcome sought is to maintain the population at its current size. It is not a viable option to reduce the large and growing feral horse population in the vast and rugged terrain of Kosciuszko National Park.

    Feral horses are trashing and trampling our sensitive alpine ecosystems and streams, causing the decline and extinction of native animals. The federal government’s Threatened Species Scientific Committee has stated that feral horses ‘may be the crucial factor that causes final extinction’ for 12 alpine species.

    I recognise the sad reality that urgent and humane measures are necessary to urgently remove the horses or they will destroy the Snowies and the native wildlife that call the mountains home. I support a healthy national park where native species like the Corroboree Frog and Mountain Pygmy Possum can thrive.

    Kind regards,
    [Your name]
    [Your email address]
    [Your postcode]