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Protecting Dingoes...


It is protecting, and not killing, dingoes that enables their pack structure to remain intact, to limit their own reproduction for the sake of sustainability, and thus to reduce stock losses and protect wider biodiversity by providing a natural "balance of nature". Dingoes have very particular genetic traits and physiologies that enable them to live in the wild. So that even when hybridisation occurs, if a dog is able to live in the wild should it be considered the same as a dingo in terms of predation and pack structure? The distinction should be drawn between dingoes and roaming, homeless or abandoned domesticated dogs. What the term 'wild dog' has done is just made it easier to control dingoes while saying that we are conserving dingoes...

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