Rabbit Free Australia Logo

Our Vision

Australian landscapes that are free of their most notorious pest - the European wild rabbit

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Charter
    • Governance
    • Getting Involved
  • About Rabbits
    • The Rabbit Problem
    • Rabbits in Australia
    • Rabbit Biology
    • Environmental Harm
    • Economic Loss
    • Key Messages
  • Rabbit Control
    • Overview
    • Assess
    • Plan
    • Manage
    • Improve
  • Our Projects
    • Research Priorities
      • Current Research
      • Former Research
    • Awareness Priorities
      • Current Awareness Activities
      • Former Awareness Activities
    • On-Ground Priorities
      • Current On-Ground Activities
      • Former On-Ground Activities
  • Resources
    • Media
    • Bilby’s Picks
    • Links & References
  • Member’s Lounge
    • Rabbit-Free Australia Membership
    • Donate
    • Profile
    • Rabbit-Free Forum
    • Rabbit-Free Blog
    • Events
    • Rabbit-Free Shop
  • Menu

Gene drive questions

Posted on July 2, 2018July 2, 2018

Gene drive technology (a way to spread a specific gene through a species) may have potential for feral animal control (especially in isolated pest populations), but non-technical questions are also being raised.

For more information, see the ABC News article – ‘Feral science or feral solution‘.

Posted in Articles & Documentaries, Biological Control, Research and tagged feral control, Gene drive.

Post navigation

← Disease synergies aid rabbit control
Synergistic disease dynamics →

Foundation

About Us

Join Us

Contact Us

Reference

About Rabbits

Rabbit Control

Book Shop

Current projects

Research

Awareness

Control

Online Communication

Forum

Blog

Media

RFA thanks our major sponsor

Rabbit Free Australia, © 2023