Deer sprinting across ACT highway
Share and Follow

Dashcam footage of a deer narrowly missing cars as it darted across a busy Canberra highway has laid bare an environmental “public safety crisis”.

Driver Chris Per captured the deer’s death-defying sprint while travelling down Ginnindara Drive in the nation’s capital yesterday and managed to avoid hitting the animal.

Feral deer are found in every Australian state and territory and the Invasive Species Council has warned the exploding population could pose a huge danger to residents.

Deer sprinting across ACT highway
Chris Per captured the deer’s death-defying sprint yesterday. (Chris Per)

Chief executive Jack Gough has called on the NSW government to take action to cull the wild deer population before there is a major accident.

“The ACT government has been really proactive in managing feral deer, particularly with undertaking thermal-assisted aerial culls, but the pressure of the growing population means that increasingly they are getting into urban areas,” Gough said.

“Feral deer are trashing, trampling and polluting our forests and rivers and are an increasing threat to motorists and agriculture.

“We need ongoing, scaled-up, professional control efforts to protect Canberra and our other capital cities.”

Gough said the growing Canberra deer population required “ongoing control programs” but claimed the animals are crossing the border from NSW into the Australian Capital Territory.

Deer can do critical damage to cars in the same way large kangaroos can, he added.

Deer running across ACT highway
The Invasive Species Council said deer are travelling across the NSW border into the ACT. (Chris Per)

“Unfortunately, even if the numbers get down to zero, they will keep crossing the border because NSW is doing such a poor job of managing feral deer,” Gough said.

“People know how much damage 40-60kg kangaroos can cause to their car but don’t always realise just how big and heavy a deer can be.

“Sambar deer, for example, can be 250-300kg.”

According to the Invasive Species Council, the level of feral deer in Australia has doubled since 2002, reaching an estimated 2 million in 2022.

The council said uncontrolled feral deer populations can grow by up to 50 per cent every year.

9news.com.au has contacted the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water for comment.
Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Seven Men with Potential Extremism Ties Released: Key Details Unveiled

Seven men with possible links to Islamic extremism will be monitored by…
Bureau of Meterology accidentally sends tsunami warning

False Tsunami Alert Sparks Panic Across Australia: Authorities Clarify Mistake

The Bureau of Meteorology has apologised after a tsunami warning was sent…
Sultana will be eligible for parole in January 2056.

Shocking Sentencing: Man Receives Decades-Long Prison Term for Brutal Assault on Partner

A man convicted of a brutal domestic violence murder, who later boasted…
Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein together.

Unveiled Secrets: US Justice Department Releases Explosive Jeffrey Epstein Files

The exact number of files set to be released under a congressional…
Vladimir Putin

Putin Asserts Kremlin’s Military Objectives in Ukraine Will Be Met

During his meticulously planned annual press briefing, President Putin announced that Russian…
The fines amount to the largest combined penalties ASIC has ever secured against a single entity.

Federal Court Calls for Higher Penalty: ANZ’s $240 Million Fine Deemed Insufficient

The Federal Court has imposed an additional $10 million penalty on ANZ,…
Jactina Allan has warned there will be consequences for people who attend the rally in Melbourne's CBD.

Calls Intensify for Victorian Government Response to Controversial Anti-Zionist Rally

Jewish leaders are calling on the Victorian government to prevent an anti-Zionism…
The moment group of nine Melbourne High boys open their ATAR results together in 2024.

Relief for Students as ATAR Scores Announced Across Multiple States

Most of the nation’s 2025 Year 12 students have finally seen their…