Australia seizes 100,000 illegal cockroaches

Summary

Australia seized more than 100,000 illegal cockroaches from a breeder in its largest-ever confiscation of exotic invertebrates.

Why this matters

The seizure underscores Australia’s strict biosecurity rules and the risks officials say exotic species can pose to agriculture, native wildlife and pest control. It also signals that keeping, breeding or selling these cockroaches can lead to prosecution.

Australian officials seized more than 100,000 live cockroaches from a commercial breeder in Bathurst, New South Wales, in May, marking the country’s largest seizure of exotic invertebrates, the Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water said Friday.

The haul of Madagascar hissing cockroaches and dubia cockroaches was worth 200,000 Australian dollars ($142,000), the department said.

Both species are illegal to import into Australia and cannot be legally kept, bred or sold, regardless of how they were obtained, according to the department.

The Madagascar hissing cockroach is among the world’s largest cockroach species, measuring 2 to 3 inches long. Australia’s common cockroach measures about 0.9 to 1.4 inches, and the country has hundreds of cockroach species.

Exotic cockroaches “have not been subject to an environmental risk assessment” and could spread disease or harm native wildlife, the department said. Officials warned that people found with the insects could face prosecution.

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