Fire ants have been detected in northern New South Wales after a turf delivery from southeast Queensland, marking the state’s first incursion in nearly a year. The previous detection occurred in January, when a nest was found in Wardell, just south of Ballina.
Invasive Species Council Advocacy Manager, Reece Pianta said: ‘This latest detection confirms our concerns around the growing build up of fire ant numbers within suppression zones.
‘I’ve been to fields with hundreds of fire ant nests less than 50 metres from turf farm production areas. This is a recipe for a national fire ant disaster.
‘We call on the state government to urgently conduct a suppression and compliance blitz to prevent the spread of these tiny killers.
‘Fire ants are one of the world’s worst super pests and their unchecked spread will result in economic damage greater than that caused by cane toads, rabbits, feral cats and foxes combined.
‘To eradicate fire ants we can’t kill most of them, we must systematically treat 100% of the land in the infestation zone.
‘If fire ants spread to other parts of Australia it will undermine eradication efforts and put humans and animals at risk.
‘This is a stark reminder to the Queensland LNP government. Strengthening the fire ant eradication program must be a first 100 day priority. An immediate boost in 2025 can get eradication on track and long term eradication funding after the 2027 expiry date can get the job done.’
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