Copy
Email not displaying correctly?  View it in your browser.
MEDIA RELEASE

Winning photographs have feral dogs and cats in focus

4 November 2014

   
Photographs of a den of wild dog pups on an outback station and a feral cat in the remote Western Desert took out the winning prize and people’s choice awards respectively in the Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre’s (IA CRC) national Feral Photos competition.

The winning photo was taken in the northern Goldfields of Western Australia by Daniel Briggs.

“I was out for a run on the station when I heard a yap in the scrub. I looked over and spotted a wild dog. It began to growl and circle me and then I noticed another one. I wasn't too fussed, as usually they are pretty timid. On my return journey I heard whimpering and investigated. That’s where I found the den of pups. I stretched my head and arm with the phone into the tunnel and came out with a couple of shots. I probably could have got a better shot but didn't fancy leaving myself exposed to mum for any longer,” Daniel said.

The people’s choice award went to Kate Crossing from Alice Springs. Kate works with the Kiwirrkurra community in Western Australia on activities like threatened species surveys and managing feral animals.
 
“The photo is of Nolia Napangarti Ward holding a feral cat which she had just hunted. People from the Kiwirrkurra community in the Western Desert have a long tradition of hunting cats for food. This one had several small lizards in its stomach, which just goes to show how feral cats are impacting our native wildlife,” Kate said.

Jessica Marsh, the Natural Resource Management Facilitator for the IA CRC based at the NSW Department of Primary Industries, and coordinator of the competition, said over 400 entries were received this year.

“The photographs clearly show the interactions in rural and urban environments between pest animals, native species, livestock and humans. We want to use these images to highlight just how devastating pest animals can be to agriculture and the environment,” she said.

The 2014 Feral Photos winners are as follows:
  • 1st Place: Daniel Briggs from Victoria with a photo of ‘Wild dog pups in a den’ taken in the northern Goldfields, Western Australia.
  • 2nd Place: Trent Scholz from South Australia with a photo of ‘Camel train’ taken in the Simpson Desert, South Australia.
  • 3rd Place: John Jones from South Australia with a photo of ‘Flying toad’ taken in Queensland.
  • People’s Choice: Kate Crossing from Alice Springs with a photo of ‘Nolia and the feral cat’ taken in the remote Western Desert, Western Australia.
  • Best Remote Camera: Ian Robb from New South Wales with a photo of ‘Wedge tailed eagle and Fox’ taken in NSW.
  • Judges gave a Highly Commended to: Queenslanders Joe Scanlan (roadside feral cat) and Neil Walker (feral cat reflection), WA’s Marika Maxwell (Feral cat with Phascogale) and NSW’s Jan Jacka (Wedge tailed eagle preying on rabbit).
All the winning entries can be viewed at www.invasiveanimals.com/feral-photos/
 

1st Prize: Daniel Briggs (Vic) Wild dog pups in a den, taken in the Northern Goldfields, Western Australia.

2nd Prize: Trent Scholz (SA) Camel train, taken in the Simpson Desert, South Australia.

~ENDS~
 
Media Contact:
Kylee Carpenter, Communications Officer, Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre, 02 6201 2890 / 0429 985 643, kylee.carpenter@invasiveanimals.com

Picture Editors:
Contact Kylee Carpenter (above) to obtain the Feral Photos you wish to use.
 

MORE INFORMATION:

www.invasiveanimals.com
www.feral.org.au

Kylee Carpenter
Communications Officer
Invasive Animals CRC
Canberra, ACT
Ph: 02-6201 2890 or 0429 985 643
Email: kylee.carpenter@invasiveanimals.com