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Australian outback station turned into national park
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) June 27, 2020

A slice of the Australian outback almost the size of greater London will be turned into a national park to help protect threatened species, authorities said Saturday, in a move welcomed by green groups.

Narriearra Station, a 1,534-square kilometre (592-square-mile) property in northwest New South Wales, is the biggest purchase of private land for national parks ever made by the state government, Environment Minister Matt Kean said.

It stretches across floodplains, wetlands and landscapes "currently not found anywhere in NSW national parks", he added.

Kean did not disclose the price tag for the property.

"Narriearra is an important refuge for threatened wildlife, with more than 25 threatened animal species, including nearly 90 per cent of NSW's critical habitat and breeding areas for the nationally endangered Grey Grasswren," said Kean.

Indigenous artefacts, tools and stone arrangements are also found across the property and the local Aboriginal Land Council has been invited to suggest a name for the park, he added.

The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) welcomed the new park.

"This new National Park is an example of the ambitious action required to slow and reverse the biodiversity extinction crisis," WWF Australia's Stuart Blanch said, but added NSW needed to do more.

Blanch also called on the government to employ people from the local indigenous community to help protect important sites and manage the land.

Conservation organisation Pew Charitable Trusts also hailed the move.

"The Outback landscapes in western New South Wales have not been highly protected and the scale of this historic purchase is exciting," the group's Australian director Barry Traill said.


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FLORA AND FAUNA
New eDNA technique may reduce pathogens in aquatic animal trade
Washington DC (UPI) Jun 24, 2020
A Washington State University researcher has developed new ways to detect the genetic signatures of disease in the international aquatic animal trade. The methods call for the screening of environmental DNA, or eDNA - genetic material collected from the environment - not an animal's cells, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Scientific Reports. Bats and livestock aren't the only animals carrying potentially harmful diseases - fish and amphibians can also carry zoon ... read more

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