The Indian myna, dubbed “the cane toad of the sky,” is wreaking havoc across Queensland, outcompeting native wildlife and triggering allergies — yet no unified government strategy exists to tackle it. Communities are stepping up with traps and reporting apps, but without state or federal backing, locals feel abandoned. Some councils offer bounties, others can’t even fund incentives, forcing citizens to shoulder the burden. Experts argue trapping alone won’t cut it — habitat restoration may be key — but without a coordinated, nationwide plan, these invasive birds will keep spreading, leaving locals to fight an uphill battle they didn’t start.
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