'Operation Rock Wallaby' rains food down on wildlife hurt by Australian bushfires

Authored by sea.mashable.com and submitted by Miskatonica
image for 'Operation Rock Wallaby' rains food down on wildlife hurt by Australian bushfires

It's sweet potatoes and carrots to the rescue for the wildlife of New South Wales.

As raging bushfires continue to decimate the animal population of Australia, rescue efforts to save survivors are mounting. Estimates place the death toll anywhere in the millions to billions (although, the accuracy of these figures is up for debate), and hundreds of thousands remain stranded in their burned environments.

Chief among them are wallabies, a population that was already at-risk before the fires began.

"The wallabies typically survive the fire itself, but are then left stranded with limited natural food as the fire takes out the vegetation around their rocky habitat," said Energy and Environment Minister Matt Kean, in an interview with The Daily Mail. "The wallabies were already under stress from the ongoing drought, making survival challenging for the wallabies without assistance."

Dumping thousands of kilograms of vegetables over Australia's wilderness, volunteers and environmental officials are bringing resources to animals stranded by the fires via helicopter.

Imagine how delighted and confused the wallabies will be to have it rain sweet potato https://t.co/QekzEugmVs — Joanna Holman (@joannamuses) January 11, 2020

Per a report from Australia's 9News, it is one of the most widespread efforts of its kind — delivering food to areas including Kangaroo Valley, the Capertee and Wolgan valleys, as well as numerous national parks.

Again speaking to the The Daily Mail, Kean stated that Operation Rock Wallaby would include ongoing monitoring efforts to ensure wallaby wellbeing. "When we can, we are also setting up cameras to monitor the uptake of the food and the number and variety of animals there."

Food drops will continue until these habitats regain enough moisture and nutrients to sustain life, and efforts to manage rivaling predatory populations are underway now.

You can learn more about supporting Australia's unpaid firefighters battling the bushfire crisis, here.

dixonmason on May 15th, 2020 at 13:58 UTC »

This is probably these animals' version of Exodus. Starving to death in a barren land, and then food falls from the sky.

LifeIsBizarre on May 15th, 2020 at 13:47 UTC »

Would suck to survive a bushfire only to be killed by a carrot travelling at terminal velocity.

PaulMCapo on May 15th, 2020 at 13:20 UTC »

This is the like the wholesome inverse of Operation Beaver Drop. There were government-sanctioned programs in the U.S. that fastened parachutes to beavers before throwing them out of planes.

Below is a video of a beaver being secured with a parachute and dropped once of many times from an airplane, an operation carried out by the Idaho state commission around 1950. They say the beaver ended up liking it and would rush back in for more.

A parachuting beaver https://youtu.be/rrOE-m7sX9E

And here’s where I learned about this: an episode from The Dollop, an amazing podcast that combines humor and history:

The Beaver Drop https://allthingscomedy.com/podcasts/380---the-beaver-drop---smollop

Edit: phrasing