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MELBOURNE - Australia has lost more mammal species than any other continent and has one of the worst rates of species decline among the world's richest countries, a five-yearly environmental report card released by the government on Tuesday (July 19) said.
Animals such as the blue-tailed skink are only known to exist anymore in captivity, while the central rock-rat and Christmas Island flying fox are among mammals considered most at risk of extinction in the next 20 years, largely due to introduced predator species.
The sandalwood tree is also in decline
The report, which comes after drought, bushfires and floods ravaged Australia over the past five years, said increasing temperatures on land and sea, changing fire and rainfall patterns, rising sea levels and ocean acidification were all having significant impacts that would persist.
"The State of the Environment Report is a shocking document - it tells a story of crisis and decline in Australia's environment, and a decade of government inaction and wilful ignorance," Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek said in a statement.
She said the previous government received the report in late 2021 and, in contrast, the new Labor government would make the environment a priority.
"I won't be putting my head in the sand," she said.
Opposition deputy leader and former environment minister Sussan Ley's office was not immediately available for comment.
The number of species added to the list of threatened species or in a higher category of threat grew 8 per cent from the previous report in 2016 and would rise sharply as a result of the bushfires that hit in 2019-2020.
The Black Summer bushfires of 2019 to 2020 killed or displaced an estimated 1 billion to 3 billion animals and razed 9 per cent of koala habitat.
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The estimated spending required to revive threatened species is around A$1.69 billion(S$1.61 billion) a year, the report said, adding that the previous government's targeted spending for threatened species was A$49.6 million (S$47 million)
Australia's average land temperatures have increased by 1.4 deg C since the early 20th century.
"Sea levels continue to rise faster than the global average and threaten coastal communities," the report said.
Many of the country's most prized ecosystems, such as the Great Barrier Reef which has been hit by mass coral bleaching, are threatened by climate change and environmental extremes, the report said.
While coral reef health is declining due to marine heatwaves, the report also highlighted the threat of ocean acidification, caused by absorption of carbon dioxide from the air, which it said was nearing a tipping point that would cause the decline of coral juveniles that are key to reef recovery.