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Australians Could Do Their Bit For Climate Change And Conservation By Eating Camel Meat!

Australians are being urged to eat camel meat to help tackle the population explosion of the species in the country, indicate reports.

Australians are being urged to eat camel meat to help tackle the population explosion of the species in the country, indicate reports.

According to a report in The Telegraph, Garry Dann, who sells camel sausages, mince and steaks to restaurants across Australia, is at the forefront of a movement that wants to turn a "camel plague" in the outback into a lucrative and environmentally sustainable industry.

The animals, which now number more than one million, are destroying fragile ecosystems and trampling all over indigenous sacred sites.

They foul ancient water holes and chomp through the boughs of endangered native trees.

Traveling in large, aggressive packs, they prevent Aboriginal women from venturing into the countryside, for fear of being attacked or trampled.

The situation is expected to get worse, with the camel population predicted to double every eight to 10 years unless action is taken.

The problem has grown so large that the Australian government recently pledged 10 million pounds towards developing a camel control plan, which is expected to involve shooting them from helicopters.

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But, instead of felling thousands of the beasts and leaving their carcases to rot, Dann believes that the country's most menacing pests can be harnessed into a viable agribusiness.

Dann describes camel meat as "beautiful, healthy and organic" and says demand for the product is growing every month.

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In Alice Springs, camel pies are on the menu in pubs and camel meat is sold by butchers. It has even made its way into the kitchens of a few specialist restaurants in Adelaide.

"I know blokes who all their lives have meat for breakfast, lunch and tea, and they wouldn't know the difference between camel meat and beef," said Dann.

"It's all in the mind, we eat pigs, and pigs would eat you if they were given half the chance, but camels are lovely, intelligent creatures," he added.

He wants to expand his business and enlist Aboriginal people to trap camels at their drinking holes.

"Camels can handle Australia's dry conditions and they are a good source of low cholesterol protein," he said.

His viewpoint is supported by environmentalists, who say that lean camel meat is not only healthier than beef and lamb but that by eating a beast known as "the ship of the desert" Australians would be doing their bit for climate change and conservation.

Source-ANI
ARU


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