Pest management plant and animal
Find out lots of facts about our local pests and how you can help manage them.
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- Unlike their popular relative the edible asparagus, these asparagus species are not ones you want to grow in your garden! 
- Blue thunbergia however, is one of the highest priority invasive plants with the management response being eradication. 
- Plants grow in open pasture, along roadside verges, in bush margins and in deeply shaded areas in forests. 
- Scientists discovered that cane toad eggs release an attractant, which draws in other cane toad tadpoles who predate on the eggs. 
- This weed reproduces by seed which is often dispersed by fruit eating birds and floods. 
- Spotlight on urban wildlife - European red fox. 
- Is the European red fox a vector of the invasive basket asparagus in eastern Australia? 
- The broad dietary niche of the red fox in a hybrid coastal ecosystem in south-eastern Queensland. 
- There are not many plants found on the Sunshine Coast that’s spikes can compare to those of the honey locust tree. 
- There are 2 invasive pest plants that have been spotted on the Sunshine Coast and we’re working to eradicate them. 
- Is it a noxious weed or great habitat? 
- Are you planting a native melastoma or an invasive weed? 
- The Mexican bean tree is a fast growing tree, it has the potential to outcompete native plants and pose a threat to riparian and rainforest ecosystems. 
- 7 seedlings found in revegetation area at land for wildlife Mons property. 
 - Rubber vine is a seriously invasive pest plant which has not yet become established on the Sunshine Coast. 
- Is this a new dunal weed? 
 - The pink hibiscus plant has a clump of large burrs on it, rough around the edges, and smallish flowers. 
- There are several species of invasive grasses that are on the high priority list for management under the Sunshine Coast local government area biosecurity plan 2017.