By 1887, losses from rabbit damage compelled the New South Wales government to offer a
£25,000 reward, equivalent to in , for "any method of success not previously known in the Colony for the effectual extermination of rabbits". The commission received 1,456 suggestions, including several schemes involving biological controls (see below), but none was found to be both safe and effective. ploughing, blasting, and fumigating is widely used, especially on large farms (known as "stations"). The sandy soil in many parts of Australia makes ripping and ploughing a viable method of control, and both tractors and bulldozers are used for this operation.
Poisoning is probably the most widely used of the conventional techniques, as it requires the least effort and is capable of destroying a local population, though reinfestation given the mobility of the animal is almost inevitable. Laying baits of
pollard laced with a
phosphorus-based poison, such as "S.A.P." manufactured by
Sayers, Allport & Potter, was an early method. The advantage of phosphorus is that in dry weather, assuming it has not been laid in clumps (obviated by use of a poison cart), it soon degrades to innocuous
phosphoric acid and presents no further danger to livestock or pets. It does, however, present a real fire risk, and concentrated fumes can be toxic to operators. More modern poisons for rabbit control are
sodium fluoroacetate ("1080") and
pindone. Another technique is hunting using
ferrets, wherein ferrets are deployed to chase the rabbits out to be shot or into nets set over the burrows. Since the number of rabbits ferrets can kill is limited, this is more a hunting activity than a serious control method. Although ferrets and other mustelid species are used as control measures, Australia has significantly fewer wild mustelids to prey on the invasive rabbits while in their warrens or burrows compared to Europe and the United States. Historically, trapping was also frequently used; steel-jawed leg-holding traps were banned in most states in the 1980s on animal-cruelty grounds, though trapping continues at a lower level using rubber-jawed traps. All of these techniques are limited to working only in settled areas and are quite labour-intensive.
Fences Ring-fencing can be highly effective way of providing a rabbit-free area. In the 1880s,
James Moseley ringed Coondambo Station with wire netting and fenced off the watercourses; at the first heatwave, the rabbits perished of thirst. Shortly after 1900, he fenced off the deserted Yardea, Paney, Pondana, Yarloo, and Thurlga stations in the
Gawler Ranges with of wire netting, turning them within a few years from degraded land overrun with rabbits into a profitable sheep run. Well-known modern examples, which also exclude foxes, dogs, and cats are
Warrawong and
Yookamurra wildlife sanctuaries, pioneered by
John Wamsley. Two well-known examples of much more extensive fences are:
Queensland In July 1884,
Ernest James Stevens, a member of the
Queensland Legislative Assembly, proposed that the
Queensland government erect a fence to prevent the infestation of rabbits in New South Wales from spreading into Queensland (his
Logan electorate being very close to the New South Wales border). In 1893, a
rabbit-proof fence was commenced in
Queensland. It was progressively extended through the years. In 1997, a final segment was built connecting it to the
Dingo Fence. It extends from
Mount Gipps (near
Rathdowney) to
Goombi between
Chinchilla and
Miles.
Western Australia From 1901 to 1907, the
rabbit-proof fence was built in Western Australia between
Cape Keraudren and
Esperance to try to control the spread of the rabbit population from the east into Western Australian pastoral areas. Given that
European rabbits can both jump very high and burrow underground, a perfectly intact fence stretching for hundreds of kilometres, and whose gates farmers or graziers did not leave open for livestock or machinery, was still unlikely to succeed. As such, the Number 1 Rabbit-Proof Fence, which was erected in 1901, failed to keep the rabbit population away from the protected area. Even after this large scale fence had failed, smaller scale fencing projects continued to make a successful appearance. On 16 April 1888, the New South Wales government appointed a royal commission "to make a full and diligent inquiry as to whether or not the introduction of contagious diseases amongst rabbits by inoculation or otherwise, or the propagation of diseases natural to rabbits ... will be accompanied or followed by danger to human health or life, or to animal life other than rabbits, or to interfere injuriously with the profitable carrying on of agricultural or pastoral pursuits ..." Under the aegis of the commission, tests were conducted at
Rodd Island, and although rabbits who were given food adulterated with chicken cholera bacillus were killed, no evidence was found of the contagion spreading to healthy rabbits. In 1885, Professor
Archibald Watson of the
University of Adelaide suggested releasing rabbits inoculated with
rabbit scab into an enclosed trial area. Limited trials suggested that the measure would be ineffective in the drier parts of the continent. In September 1887, Dr Herbert Butcher (1854–1893) of
Wilcannia found a number of dead, emaciated rabbits at Tintinallogy Station. Dr H. Ellis of Sydney and he concluded that the animals had died of a novel disease, which they dubbed Tintinallogy virus. They felt it could be an effective control measure, but whatever the rabbits died from was never proved to be infectious or contagious. It may have been simple starvation caused by natural elements. In 1950, following research conducted by
Frank Fenner,
myxoma virus was deliberately released into the rabbit population, causing it to drop from an estimated 600 million to around 100 million. Growing genetic resistance in the remaining rabbits had allowed the population to recover to 200–300 million by 1991. To combat that trend, over three years from June 1991, the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) comprehensively tested the potential of a
Calicivirus, which causes
rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RHD), for biological control of wild rabbits. The virus escaped from a quarantine compound on
Wardang Island, South Australia, where the field tests were being carried out, and by late October 1995, it was recorded in rabbits at
Yunta and
Gum Creek, in north-eastern South Australia. By the winter of 1996, the virus was established in Victoria, New South Wales, the Northern Territory and Western Australia. The virus was discovered in these areas by analyzing livers of dead rabbits. The success of the virus was found to be higher in dry areas, because of a benign calicivirus found in the colder, wetter areas of Australia, which was immunising rabbits against the more virulent form. A legal vaccine exists in Australia for RHD, but no cure is known for either myxomatosis or RHD, and many affected pets have to be euthanized. In Europe, where rabbits are farmed on a large scale, they are protected against myxomatosis and calicivirus with a genetically modified virus developed in Spain. A team headed by virologist Francisco Parra, working with the
University of Oviedo, in
Asturias, northern Spain, identified a new variant of the virus in 2012. The pathogen, a new strain of K5 (RHDV1), is both extremely lethal and highly contagious. In 2017, it was released by Australian authorities at around 600 points on the continent. Owners of domestic rabbits were advised to vaccinate their animals. In southern Europe, the scarcity of rabbits threatens the conservation of
endangered predator species higher up the
food chain, that depend on small game such as rabbits. These include the
Iberian lynx and the
Iberian imperial eagle. For this reason, biological warfare against rabbits in Australia is a serious concern for conservation activities in other parts of the world. The cost of rabbit vaccination substantially raises the cost of rabbit meat in Australia; from 2004 to 2014, the number of farms dropped from 80 to 4, and the meat has become a rarity. ==See also==