Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent
When a mouse plague hits Australia’s grain belt, it is not merely an infestation: it is a biological explosion. The current outbreak, which began in 2020 and has now swept through New South Wales, Queensland, and Victoria, has reached densities of over 1,000 mice per hectare in some areas. These are not ordinary numbers. They represent a fundamental shift in the relationship between climate and ecology.
To understand why this is happening, one must look at the meteorology. Australia’s recent rainfall patterns have broken records. The La Niña cycle, which usually brings wetter conditions, has been intensified by a warming climate. Moisture deep in the soil has allowed crops to flourish but also created an ideal breeding ground for mice. Normally, a dry spell would curb their numbers. But the rains have continued, and with them, an uninterrupted food supply.
British ecologists have now issued a stark warning: the current models used to predict mouse plagues are failing. Historically, plagues occurred every four to five years and followed a predictable boom-bust cycle. This outbreak is different. It has persisted for over 18 months, and the usual collapse has not materialised. Dr. Fiona McKeown of the University of Cambridge notes that “the thermal threshold for mouse reproduction has shifted. Warmer nights mean longer breeding seasons. We are now seeing three breeding cycles per year where there used to be two.”
The implications for agriculture are profound. Mice cause over $300 million in damage annually in Australia, but the current outbreak is estimated to cost $1 billion. Grain is contaminated, machinery is destroyed, and farmers face psychological stress. Yet the problem is not confined to Australia. Similar outbreaks have been reported in parts of Argentina and the American Midwest, suggesting a global pattern tied to climate variability.
Technological solutions are being explored. Gene editing, fertility control, and even artificial intelligence to detect early population spikes are on the table. But these are years away from deployment. For now, farmers are resorting to poison baiting on an industrial scale, which itself carries ecological costs: secondary poisoning of raptors and other predators disrupts natural control.
This is where the calm urgency of science meets the slow grind of policy. The mouse plague is not a freak event. It is a preview of how a warming world will destabilise systems we take for granted. Every degree of warming amplifies ecological volatility. The evidence is clear: we need to adapt our agricultural models now, or face repeated biological shocks that no amount of poison can contain.









