A controversial cull of up to 10,000 wild horses in Australia's harsh Outback reportedly began today in a bid to control the feral animals which officials say are destroying the land.
The Central Land Council said animals -- including horses, donkeys and camels -- were dying in their thousands due to a lack of food and water and a cull was necessary on humanitarian and environmental grounds.
They also argue that the destruction of water holes by the large animals was having an impact on native species which rely on the same drinking sources.
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But the Australian Broadcasting Corporation said it had started and a public health and safety warning had been issued telling people to steer clear of an area about 300 kilometres southwest of Alice Springs.
The animals will be shot from helicopters under a government-funded scheme expected to last until mid June.
News of the cull this month sparked protests from horse lovers but the council insisted it was necessary, arguing that the horses, and camels, were suffering and dying and polluting waterholes.
"Nobody wants to see suffering, especially the traditional owners of the land who love the horses but are well aware of the terrible consequences of out of control populations," council director David Ross said earlier this month.
"We want to undertake an aerial cull of horses on one particular area where there are about 10,000 feral horses suffering terrible and slow deaths and destroying the country for years to come. The damage is catastrophic."
Ross said aerial culling was the most humane way of dealing with the animals given it was not possible to muster horses over thousands of square kilometres with few roads and no yards.
He said it was also not practical or satisfactory to muster and then truck the horses some 1,500 kilometres to the nearest abattoir.
Ross said he understood the protests against the cull, but said he had heartbreaking footage taken by motion sensor cameras of horses dying in terrible circumstances.