
'It's like a decaying body': Australian farmers battle mouse plague
'It's like a decaying body': Australian farmers battle mouse plague 33 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleLana LamSydney Watch: Mouse plague terrorising farmers in AustraliaA mouse plague is terrorising...
Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: 'It's like a decaying body': Australian farmers battle mouse plague 33 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleLana LamSydney Watch: Mouse plague terrorising farmers in AustraliaA mouse plague is terrorising farmers across large swathes of Australia, with the rodents running rampant around homes and ravaging fields of grain. It comes as farmers are already under pressure from unpredictable fuel and fertiliser supplies due to the ongoing US-Israeli war on Iran. This new battle has seen farmers pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into either re-planting crops that have been devoured by the mice or spending precious farming hours laying down bait – sterile seeds laced with mouse poison.
"It's a big cost and it's not just the price of the bait," says Geoff Cosgrove, 43, who runs a 14,000-hectare farm in Mingenew, Western Australia (WA), growing wheat, canola, lupin and barley. "They do play with your mind - running around at night, in the ceiling, the air conditioning units. You can hear them and you can smell them - it's like a decaying body.
The Details
"Cosgrove has been farming for 25 years and in that time, he's only ever had to bait twice. This year's mouse plague is "way worse than the one in 2021", he says. That year a mouse plague swept through many parts of Australia, with large areas of New South Wales (NSW) and parts of Queensland suffering their worst plague in memory.
The situation was so dire in NSW that hundreds of prisoners were forced to relocate after mice caused extensive damage at their jail. This time, farmers in WA first began reporting plague-like numbers of mice in March, with their neighbours in South Australia following suit shortly after. Geoff CosgroveWestern Australia farmer Geoff Cosgrove hopes mice numbers will drop as winter approachesBumper harvest boosts mice numbersAbout two hours north of Cosgrove's farm, agronomist and farmer Belinda Eastough, 59, recalls the mouse plague that hit WA about five years ago.
"The last time , they were in my handbag," she says from her 5,500-hectare farm in Nolba, 80km (50 miles) northeast of Geraldton, one of the hardest hit areas. "They were everywhere - in the floors, the walls, in the pantry. But I haven't had them in the pantry this year.
What Experts Say
"That's because "they're staying where the food is," she says, out in the paddocks. "Last year, we had a record-breaking harvest so that gives the mice a lot of food. "A big harvest means large amounts of grain spilt in the paddocks during the processing of crops, leading to an easily accessible and much-loved food source for mice.
"Then we got some summer rain," Eastough says, which spurred the growth of young green shoots. "So instead of just steak, they got steak and salad. Basically, the mice were in absolute mouse heaven.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





