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Australia Worried Over Mouse Infestation’s Impact on Food Supply

May 2 (Reuters) – Australia’s government ⁠said ⁠on Saturday it ⁠was worried about a plague of ​mice in the west and would keep working ‌with industry to curb ‌its impact on food supply.

“Obviously ⁠we’re ⁠concerned about the mice situation including in Western Australia,” ​Energy Minister Chris Bowen said in televised remarks from Sydney.

According to local media, mice – a ​persistent problem in Australian grain-growing regions – have ⁠been infesting ⁠farms in the ⁠wheatbelt ​state of Western Australia. The situation prompted grain ​producers in April ⁠to warn of crop losses and call for access to more powerful mice poison.

Bowen said the centre-left government was continuing ⁠to work hard with industry to reduce the plague’s ⁠impact on local and overseas food supply.

“A mice plague is a very difficult situation for farmers and for industry and for governments,” he added.

Australia, the world’s fourth-largest wheat exporter, suffered its worst mouse plague in 1993, when the ⁠rodents destroyed thousands of hectares of crops and attacked livestock in pig and chicken farms, according to the country’s science ​agency.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; ​Editing by William Mallard)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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