PLAGUE OF MICE
VISITATION IN AUSTRALIA. , EFFECTS OF LUSH SEASON. Australia’s trans-continental railway, for much of its route through Western Australia, traverses lonely desert stretches, but from time to time the monotony is unpleasantly relieved by a plague of pests. The latest visitation is from hordes of mice, which in their millions give the impression that the whole earth is bubbling and moving. They swarm across the railway line day and night, making life for maintenance workers almost unbearable. While the men arcasleep mice gnaw their hair and ears, unless they pull the bedclothes over their heads. One telegraph linesman who had been away for a week came back to camp and on getting into bed found it full of mice.
Food and clothes are being destroyed bv the mice, and at many points along the line it has been found impossible to keep them out of drinking water. This is a serious problem, as water has to be carted as far as 400 miles to some camps. The mice followed a plague of rabbits, apparently from some inland drought-stricken and foodless area. The rabbits arc now dying in hundreds of thousands along the line, and their rotting carcases arc in turn creating a plague of green blowflies, which often form a solid green mass on the ground outside the railway camps. By weight of numbers, the surviving rabbits have grown so tame that passengers step oft trains and pick them up. A lush season in New South Wales and Victoria has brought a plague of caterpillars and cut-worms, which are doing tremendous damage to crops and pasturage. In the Albury district, on the border of these two states, snakes are more plentiful than the oldest residents can remember. A record number have been killed, and children have been specially warned to exercise care. Three children, faced by a large tiger snake, took refuge in a tree, from which they were rescued some time later.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 December 1942, Page 5
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325PLAGUE OF MICE Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 December 1942, Page 5
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