
‘A significant disaster': extreme floods risk conservation efforts in outback Queensland
As the rain came down, his partner and kids did the bolt to home on Australian Wildlife Conservancy's (AWC) Mt Zero-Taravale wildlife sanctuary, 80km to the north-west, taking with them the groceries. McAllister stayed in town to complete a few jobs.
By the time McAllister reached Mt Zero-Taravale later the same day, the road to the house was cut with flood water. Making it to a shed on the property he jumped in a side-by-side buggy and went cross-country, only to find these tracks, too, were cut by rising water. He returned to the shed.
'I had grabbed a salad roll and a bag of Doritos before I left town and that's all the food I had,' McAllister says.
Scrounging around in the back of his ute he added six small tins of tuna to his supplies. 'I found some hessian bags that we use for animal traps and laid them on a work bench for a bed, and I figured I could go without food for a week. I had shelter and a Starlink connection, and water wasn't a problem, but straight away I was preparing for a potential longer-term stay.'
After three days, a break in the rain allowed McAllister to get the buggy through creeks to home.
It was the first of five major flooding events on the east coast this year, the latest of which, in northern New South Wales, killed five people, affected 10,000 properties and destroyed 800 homes.
The damage at Mt Zero-Taravale is less devastating, but could spell trouble to come in protecting Australia's native species in the most remote and changeable landscapes.
McAllister is the manager at Mt Zero-Taravale in Gugu Badhun Country, where a feral predator-proof fence protects a reintroduced population of endangered northern bettongs in a 950-hectare exclosure.
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'Northern bettongs have been identified as one of the top 20 animals to go extinct in the next 10 years,' McAllister says.
AWC built the fence in 2023 with cyclones and monsoonal deluges in mind, with breakaway sections over creeks – and in February, they broke.
'Debris built up along these sacrificial sections, but they did what they were designed to do and broke away,' McAllister says. 'The fence was open for a week and then we were able to get in and do temporary repairs.'
Reassuringly, the 52 cameras placed within the reserve have not detected any incursion by feral predators. The deluge has temporarily helped with weed control, flushing the lantana, a prickly flowering shrub listed as a weed of national significance, out of the creeks.
Down on Naree Station Reserve, on Budjiti Country 130km north-west of Bourke in northern NSW, the Bush Heritage Australia (BHA) ecologist Bridget Roberts has a similar tale. SES crews were air-dropping mail and supplies to her after floods in western Queensland in April. But Roberts considers herself lucky. 'As a conservation property, we don't have responsibilities such as moving cattle or concern about what they're going to eat afterwards; this has been a significant disaster for a lot of people,' she says.
Like McAllister, Roberts will have fences to fix and roads and erosion to repair but she sees first-hand the ecological bounty of a big flood in channel country, especially with a three-eyed crustacean known as a shield shrimp.
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The shield shrimp, 8-9cm long, lays eggs that can survive in dry soil for more than seven years and can withstand temperatures of nearly 100C. When the rains come the eggs hatch, and the shrimp embark on a frenzied speed-breeding cycle.
'Within a day or two, they've moved through their larval stage and look like tiny versions of their adult self,' Roberts says. 'In about two weeks, they're at maturity and breeding. They live fast and die young because they're basically racing the puddles. They need to complete their life cycle before the water dries out.'
In a quirk of nature, the eggs of the shield shrimp need to dry out before they can hatch. 'They go into diapause, which basically means they pause development of the embryo until conditions are just right.'
The shrimp bring benefits for the environment, recycling nutrients as they gobble all in their path, and providing food for birds, which will arrive en masse for a major breeding event. Naree protects the strategic inland wetlands of the Cuttaburra Channels and Yantabulla Swamp. 'There are a lot of wetlands filling now, but with any luck the birds will choose our swamp, and we'll see them in all their glory,' she says.
BHA has properties across flood-affected parts of Queensland, in the desert country around Boulia and Bedourie and on the Diamantina River south-west of Winton, all of which have been cut off in floods so far this year.
As floods become more common and more extreme in the climate crisis, BHA's executive manager of science and conservation, Rebecca Spindler, says those ecosystems, which have evolved for the occasional flood, may struggle to recover.
'The extent and longevity of these floods will take more native species with them as the severity increases with climate change,' she says. 'Our science helps us find properties that have natural terrain features that hold water in the dry and provide refuge in the deluge.'
Spindler says the receding waters will see predators target vulnerable wildlife and weeds flourish, requiring vigilant monitoring by reserve managers and ecologists as soon as access is possible.
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The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
The Latest: Trump lands in Texas to survey flood damage
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'So what we're doing is, the weapons that are going out are going to NATO, and then NATO is going to be giving those weapons (to Ukraine), and NATO is paying for those weapons.' U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Friday that some of the U.S.-made weapons Ukraine is seeking are deployed with NATO allies in Europe. Those weapons could be transferred to Ukraine, with European countries buying replacements from the U.S., he said. 'It's a lot faster to move something, for example, from Germany to Ukraine than it is to order it from a (U.S.) factory and get it there,' Rubio told reporters during a visit to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. ▶ Read more about the war in Ukraine Trump backs Brazil's Bolsonaro Brazil's former leader, Jair Bolsonaro, is facing a criminal trial for trying to overturn his election defeat. 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Abbott to extend the major disaster declaration beyond Kerr County to eight additional counties, making them eligible for direct financial assistance to recover and rebuild. 'I thank President Trump and his Administration for their swift and continued support,' Abbott said in statement Thursday. 'Texas will continue to deploy all available resources and support to help those impacted until the job is done.' More counties could be added to the disaster declaration as further information from the damage assessments becomes available, according to FEMA. Vought says administration 'on the verge' of fulfilling promises to defund NPR and PBS The White House budget chief said Republicans have been talking for years about eliminating federal money for public media, and now they have a chance to do exactly that. Congress is slated to vote on recissions, which would claw back $9 billion in funding. 'It's important that we finally take that opportunity to and not fall back on the tired old excuses,' Vought said. He plans to be on Capitol Hill on Tuesday to answer questions from lawmakers and he's confident the legislation will pass. Should the Fed stay independent? Vought won't say After his interview with CNBC, Vought spoke to reporters at the White House. He declined to say whether the Fed should continue to operate independently as it sets monetary policy, saying 'I think the question is immaterial.' He pivoted to criticizing the Fed's headquarters overhaul. 'I know you guys want to make it more of a metaphysical question,' Vought said, but insisted 'this is about the extent to which this building, this renovation project, is horrifying from a cost perspective.' Trump administration keeps pressure on the Federal Reserve Russell Vought, Trump's top budget adviser, bobbed and weaved through an interview with CNBC as the White House ratchets up the pressure on the Federal Reserve to lower rates. Vought said Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who Trump wants to replace, has 'mismanaged the institution' and 'has been late at every turn' when it comes to setting monetary policy. CNBC's Joe Kernen asked if it was really the right time to lower interest rates, as the president has demanded. If the economy is as strong as Trump says, 'that's usually not a time where you need interest rate cuts.' Vought said inflation isn't a problem and 'we want to see the benefits of a growing economy flow to all Americans,' such as with cheaper mortgages. CNBC's Melissa Lee pressed Vought on whether the administration's concerns about the high cost of renovating the Fed's headquarters was part of a pressure campaign to achieve lower rates. 'This is about the extent to which this building is incredibly expensive and overrun,' Vought said. Trump's schedule, according to the White House Trump and first lady Melania Trump are scheduled to visit parts of Texas devastated by flooding before retiring to the Trump Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey. 9:30 a.m. — Trump and the first lady will depart Washington for Kerrville, Texas 2:10 p.m. — Following their noon arrival, they will meet with first responders and local authorities 3:15 p.m. — The president and first lady will depart for Bedminster, New Jersey Trump to host the Philippine president this month to discuss trade and security in Asia President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s will visit the United States from July 20 to 22 but Philippine officials were still finalizing details of his meeting with Trump with the U.S. State Department, the Philippine government said. The allies have boosted mutual defense engagements, including large-scale combat exercises in the Philippines, to strengthen deterrence against China's increasingly aggressive actions in the region. Among the proposed topics for discussion is strengthening 'peace through deterrence,' Philippine Ambassador to Washington Jose Manuel Romualdez told The Associated Press by telephone. That echoed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 's remarks about the U.S. military's plan to ratchet up deterrence against China's increasingly assertive actions in the disputed South China Sea by intensifying security engagements with the Philippines and allied nations in the region. ▶ Read more about the Philippine president's planned visit The State Department is firing more than 1,300 employees The firings Friday are in line with a dramatic reorganization plan unveiled by the Trump administration earlier this year. The department is sending layoff notices to 1,107 civil servants and 246 foreign service officers with domestic assignments in the United States, said a senior State Department official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss personnel matters ahead of individual notices being emailed to affected employees. Foreign service officers affected will be placed immediately on administrative leave for 120 days, after which they'll formally lose their jobs, according to an internal notice obtained by The Associated Press. For most affected civil servants, the separation period is 60 days, it said. President Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and their Republican allies have lauded the move as overdue and necessary to make the department leaner and more efficient. But the cuts have been roundly criticized by current and former diplomats who say they'll weaken U.S. influence and its ability to counter existing and emerging threats abroad. — Matthew Lee


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Trump news at a glance: Trump tours Texas disaster zone as administration dodges questions over future of Fema
Donald Trump has defended the state and federal response to deadly flooding in Texas, while administration officials continue to dodge questions about his plans to abolish the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema). Speaking at a round table in Kerrville, Texas, Trump said Fema deployed multiple emergency response units and praised all the officials involved in what he said was an effective and swift response. 'Every American should be inspired by what has taken place,' Trump said. He called a reporter a 'bad person' for asking a question about families of the dead who are saying that their loved ones could have been saved had emergency warnings gone out before the flooding. Trump said: 'I think this has been heroism. This has been incredible, the job you've all done.' Here are the key US politics stories at a glance: During a trip on Friday to look at the devastation caused by the catastrophic flooding in Texas, Donald Trump claimed that state and federal officials had done an 'incredible job', saying of the disaster that he had 'never seen anything like this'. The trip comes as he has remained conspicuously quiet about his previous promises to do away with the federal agency in charge of disaster relief. Read the full story The US state department has begun issuing the first of more than 1,350 termination notices as part of a huge reorganisation of US's diplomatic corps under the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, according to internal documents and US diplomats at the state department on Friday. Career diplomats and other staff began to receive the notices on Friday morning, days after the supreme court lifted a ban on the Trump administration moving forward with mass firings of government employees that will affect hundreds of thousands of federal workers. 'Hearing 'I got mine!' around the floor,' one current state department employee told the Guardian. Read the full story A farm worker died on Friday from injuries sustained a day earlier in raids on two California cannabis farm sites as US immigration authorities confirmed they arrested 200 workers after a tense standoff with authorities. Jaime Alanis's death was confirmed in a social media post by the United Farm Workers advocacy group. 'We tragically can confirm that a farm worker has died of injuries they sustained as a result of yesterday's immigration enforcement action,' the post read. Read the full story Tom Homan, the US border czar, has said he does not know what happened to the eight men deported to South Sudan after the Trump administration resumed sending migrants to countries that are not their place of origin, known as third countries. 'They're free as far as we're concerned. They're free, they're no longer in our custody, they're in Sudan,' Homan told Politico on Friday. 'Will they stay in Sudan? I don't know.' Read the full story Donald Trump appears poised to deliver weapons to Ukraine by selling them first to Nato allies in a major policy shift for his administration amid frustrations with Vladimir Putin over stalling negotiations to end the war in Ukraine. Read the full story The Trump administration has killed nearly $15m in research into Pfas contamination of US farmland, bringing to a close studies that public health advocates say are essential for understanding a worrying source of widespread food contamination. The administration's move is 'not just stupid, it's evil', a former EPA attorney said. Read the full story Myanmar's military leader praised Trump and asked him to lift sanctions, as the junta sought to capitalize on a tariff letter from the US president believed to be Washington's first public recognition of its rule. Trans teenagers who say gender-affirming care saved their lives are protesting as two leading US hospitals halt their treatments. Catching up? Here's what happened on 10 July 2025.


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
Australian government not suspending ads or posts on X amid antisemitic Grok chatbot incident
The Australian government has continued advertising on X after its AI chatbot Grok praised Hitler and made antisemitic comments, despite earlier pausing ads on the platform after Elon Musk's takeover. The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, among other federal politicians, has also continued posting on X, after launching a proposed plan to combat antisemitism in Australia this week. On Wednesday, Musk's artificial intelligence firm xAI deleted 'inappropriate' posts on X after Grok began praising Adolf Hitler, referring to itself as 'MechaHitler' and making antisemitic comments in response to user queries. The department of finance, which manages federal government advertising on social media, said their advertising was not paused when this incident occurred, or after. 'Brand safety for media platforms is assessed according to a range of criteria, including ensuring that appropriate policies and technology are in place to mitigate the risk of Australian government advertising appearing adjacent to inappropriate content,' the spokesperson said. 'The [advertising] agency has not recommended that government advertising on X should be paused at this time. Assessments of brand safety on all accessed media platforms, including X, is ongoing and subject to change.' Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email The government's ad spend on X is relatively small compared with all media. Guardian Australia revealed in April that in the first year after Musk bought the platform, $2.7m was spent on advertising on X, compared with the total digital ad spending for 2022-2023 of $56.3m. Several ministers in the Albanese government have continued to post on X in the days following Grok's outburst. On Friday, Albanese posted on X about trade with China, a day after launching a wide-ranging plan proposed by Australia's antisemitism envoy. The minister for foreign affairs, Penny Wong, posted photos on Friday from a meeting of Asean foreign ministers in Malaysia. Axel Bruns, a professor in the Digital Media Research Centre at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT), said there was no benefit for government, business, politicians, journalists or other professionals to remain on X after the Grok incident. 'To remain on a platform whose built-in AI chatbot has explicitly adopted the Nazi alias 'MechaHitler' for itself is wholly inappropriate. The standard you walk past is the standard you accept,' he said. Timothy Graham, an associate professor also at QUT, said it was contradictory for politicians to take a strong stance against antisemitism, and to be communicating on a platform 'that has repeatedly failed to remove antisemitic content'. 'Not only that, but [the platform] is actually generating it,' Graham said. 'Grok is a fundamental part of the architecture of X. When the core features are antisemitic, I think you've got a problem.' The special envoy to combat antisemitism, Jillian Segal, told ABC's RN Breakfast on Friday she had held meetings with a number of social media platforms, including X. 'They're very keen to ensure that hate is not associated with their platform,' she said, adding: 'AI is the answer.' 'They are very focused on how they can construct their algorithms to root out hate or make sure it is swept from the platform without impeding proper free speech arguments,' Segal said. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Graham said he believed part of the reluctance to shift away from X is the entrenched role of what was formerly Twitter as a means for governments and politicians to communicate directly with the public. 'It's like the Rome of platforms – all the roads lead to it and out of it, because it's still inherited that power of infrastructure that it had before,' he said. 'Elon Musk knew that and that's why he bought it.' When asked what the government would do to crack down on antisemitic content on social media on Thursday, Albanese said the platforms had a social responsibility, and said he often received antisemitic replies to his posts. 'Some of those are no doubt produced by bots, but some of those are produced by individuals as well, which is why so much of this [antisemitism] report as well goes to education.' A spokesperson for the Albanese government told Guardian Australia that like most Australian politicians and world leaders, 'the prime minister engages through social media platforms, new media and traditional media to reach as many Australians as possible'. 'All social media companies need to do more to protect the vulnerable, eliminate hate speech and act as responsible corporate citizens,' the spokesperson said. Guardian Australia has sought comment from X. Government advertising was previously suspended on what was then Twitter on 29 September 2022, after reports of a number of brands' advertisements appearing next to inappropriate content, a report from the Australian National Audit Office revealed in April. A spokesperson for the finance department said at the time it was suspended 'to evaluate brand safety measures' and restored shortly after.