People in a four-wheel-drive (not any of those mentioned in the story) watch a dingo on Fraser Island. Photo: Peter Rae

(AAP) Tourists feeding and teasing dingoes on Fraser Island could lead to the extinction of the native dogs, an environmental group says. With the Easter holidays approaching, visitors to the island need to be sent a message by the Queensland government that there will be zero tolerance for those who attract or harass dingoes, said Bree Jashin of the Fraser Island Dingo Preservation Group. Ms Jashin provided AAP with a photograph of tourists kicking sand at dingoes and a first-hand account of another incident between tourists and a dingo pup, which she said could elicit a reaction and lead to the dingo’s destruction by rangers. “The right for humans to play at the expense of the future of the only thoroughbred dingoes left is unacceptable,” Ms Jashin said. “Fraser Island is the dingoes’ home and humans have to remember they are guests in that home. “This holiday season we urge DERM [the Environment Department] to send a strong message of zero tolerance towards tourists who are badly behaved on this world heritage site – rather than juvenile dingoes being destroyed for trivial and provoked misdemeanours,” Ms Jashin said. Chris Druery was among a group of three visitors in a four-wheel-drive south of Eli Creek on Fraser Island on October 1 last year when they saw an approaching vehicle drive directly towards a dingo pup. “[The driver] pointed their vehicle directly towards the pup and sped up, attempting to run it down,” Mr Druery said. “They also swerved violently towards the pup, missing it by only centimetres. “We watched the pup cower and run towards the surf with its hind legs tucked up under its rear end.” Mr Druery said those in the offending four-wheel-drive were laughing during their attempts to run the dingo down. …

Tourists ‘threatening dingo extinction’