With koala numbers in decline, one lobby group has drafted its own protection legislation
Wildlife rescuer Tracey Wilson lets out a familiar refrain whenever she receives a call about a lost or injured koala: "Here we go again".
It is not from a lack of love for the iconic marsupial — Ms Wilson spends countless hours helping injured koalas recuperate from all sorts of injuries and mishaps.
She was one of the first people on hand when 21 koalas were found dead and 49 so horribly injured they had to be euthanased after a south-west Victorian timber plantation was cleared in 2020.
Many of the koalas that survived that incident recovered at Ms Wilson's wildlife sanctuary in Koroit.
Her frustration, she said, stemmed from the fact that the number of calls to help injured koalas was increasing.
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