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John Oxley Library

The Green Monster

By Joan Bruce, Specialist Librarian, State Library of Queensland | 24 November 2017

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Invasion of Australia (Sydney Mail, 28 Feb 1923, p8)

Invasion of Australia (Sydney Mail, 28 Feb 1923, p8)

At one point it seemed as if nothing could stop the invasion of Australia by prickly pear.

Main prickly pear areas of Qld and NSW

Main prickly pear areas of Qld and NSW

The area infested in Queensland was immense,  stretching from Mackay to the New South Wales border, and huge tracts of land were abandoned as graziers and farmers were driven off their properties.

Abandoned property Chinchilla area, May 1928 (album API-101), John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

Abandoned property Chinchilla area, May 1928 (album API-101), John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

By the early 1920s "The Pear" infested 60 million acres in Queensland and New South Wales and was advancing at the rate of a million acres a year.

It was referred to using the language of war and dystopia and cartoons of the period showed a populace on the run.

Little did they know that they were about to be saved by a nondescript grey moth, Cactoblastis cactorum, in one of the most spectacular examples of biological pest control in world history.

The story of the conquest of prickly pear is one of those told in State Library of Queensland's exhibition Magnificent Makers, which runs from 9 December 2017 to 3 June 2018 . Magnificent Makers is an intriguing exploration of innovation and invention in Queensland from the late 1800s to the present day.

https://vimeo.com/243041983

Sources

API-101 Album of Prickly Pear Photographs 1926-1933

Cacti naturalised in Australia and their control/by John Mann (Qld Dept of Lands, 1970), map of main prickly pear areas of Qld and NSW opposite page 32.

Invasion of Australia (Sydney Mail, 28 Feb 1923, p8)

 

Joan Bruce - Specialist Librarian, State Library of Queensland

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