The Invasive Species Council welcomes the opportunity to comment on Tasmania’s draft Threatened Species Strategy. While it provides a high-level framework, it lacks the specificity, accountability and resourcing required to drive meaningful conservation outcomes. Thus, in its current form, the strategy is unlikely to halt species decline or prevent further extinctions.
The most significant weakness is the failure to clearly identify, prioritise and address the key threatening processes driving biodiversity loss. The draft strategy does not provide a mechanism for identifying or ranking key threats and does not commit to the development of threat abatement plans. This represents a step backwards from the 2000 strategy, which recognised that threatened species are the result of underlying threats and that managing those threats is the most effective and efficient approach to conservation.
The strategy also lacks measurable targets, timeframes and a monitoring framework, making it impossible to assess progress or ensure accountability. This is despite strong stakeholder feedback calling for clear, time-bound and measurable objectives. In addition, the strategy does not commit to sustained funding or clearly define the role of government in coordinating and delivering conservation action, placing undue emphasis on ‘collective effort’ without the necessary structure to support it.