The Invasive Species Council welcomes the opportunity to comment on Tasmania’s draft Cat Management in Tasmania discussion paper. Tasmania’s current cat management system remains fragmented, under-resourced, and overly reliant on voluntary action and local government enforcement. Despite multiple policy cycles and stakeholder feedback, key structural issues, particularly inconsistent regulation, limited infrastructure, and weak provisions for feral cat control, remain unresolved.
The next Tasmanian cat management plan should align with the national threat abatement plan for predation by feral cats 2024 and position Tasmania as a national leader in coordinated cat management, island eradication, and biodiversity protection.
This submission calls for a shift to a coherent, statewide system that is enforceable, properly funded, and aligned with Tasmania’s environmental and biosecurity objectives. Central to this is the introduction of mandatory cat containment, investment in cat management infrastructure, reform of trapping and humane destruction rules, and support for landscape-scale feral cat control. Without these reforms, Tasmania will continue to fall short in protecting wildlife, supporting communities, and managing one of its most significant invasive species threats.