
Feral deer are rapidly becoming one of Tasmania’s most costly invasive species.
They are trashing our bushland, polluting our waterways, damaging farms and causing more crashes on our roads – and the bill is growing fast.
New analysis by Frontier Economics for the Invasive Species Council estimates that deer in the Midlands
and eastern regions alone are already costing Tasmania more than $53 million a year.
Without stronger action, that cost could reach almost $1.4 billion over the next 30 years.
And that’s only part of the story. The modelling excludes many environmental, cultural and biosecurity impacts, meaning the true cost of Tasmania’s deer problem is likely much higher.