As the sun rises over New South Wales, it reveals a landscape crawling with rodents. Australian farmers are facing one of the worst mouse plagues in living memory, with fields decimated and grain stores contaminated. The economic toll is mounting, but a glimmer of hope comes from across the globe: British agricultural technology, honed in the fenlands of East Anglia, may hold the key to a humane and effective solution.
The plague, which began in earnest last year, has seen mouse populations explode to biblical proportions. Sarah Thompson, a fourth-generation wheat farmer near Dubbo, described the scene as 'apocalyptic'. 'They're everywhere. In the sheds, in the houses, even in the machinery. We've lost 30% of our stored grain, and the psychological toll is immense,' she told The Times.
Traditional methods of control, including poison and traps, have proven inadequate. Poisons risk secondary poisoning of native wildlife, and the sheer volume of rodents means traps are a Sisyphean task. Enter the British firm AgriTech Solutions, which has developed a 'smart trap' network that uses AI to detect and target mouse hotspots.
The system, called RodentGuard, deploys solar-powered sensors that monitor rodent activity in real time. When a threshold is reached, the traps are activated, using a carbon dioxide-based method that kills quickly and humanely. The data is fed into a central dashboard, allowing farmers to map infestations and predict movements. 'It's like a security system for your fields,' explained Dr. Emma Hartley, the company's CEO. 'We're giving farmers a fighting chance with precision agriculture.'
The technology was born from the battle against the water vole, a protected species that damages canal banks in the UK. 'We had to find a way to control them without harming the ecosystem,' said Hartley. 'The same principles apply in Australia: targeted, data-driven intervention that minimises collateral damage.'
But the scale of the Australian outbreak presents unique challenges. The network must cover vast distances, and the climate is harsher than the UK's. AgriTech Solutions has partnered with Australian universities to adapt the hardware for extreme heat and dust. Field trials are underway in Victoria, with early results showing a 40% reduction in mouse damage compared to untreated areas.
There is also a social dimension. The plague has exacerbated mental health issues in rural communities, with farmers reporting sleepless nights and feelings of helplessness. 'Technology can't fix everything,' Dr. Hartley acknowledged. 'But by giving back a sense of control, we hope to alleviate some of the stress.'
The British government has expressed interest in funding further research, seeing it as a potential export success story for the UK's agri-tech sector. Trade Secretary Liz Truss called it 'a prime example of British innovation solving global challenges'.
However, not everyone is convinced. Animal rights groups have raised concerns about the humaneness of any lethal control method, even one as quick as CO2 asphyxiation. 'We must tread carefully,' said Dr. Alice Green of the Australian Wildlife Conservancy. 'The ecosystem is already under pressure from climate change. We need solutions that work with nature, not against it.'
AgriTech Solutions counters that their method is the most humane available, and that doing nothing would lead to even greater suffering. 'The plague itself causes starvation and disease among the mice,' Dr. Hartley said. 'Our approach reduces overall suffering, both for the animals and for humans.'
As the trial continues, all eyes are on the data. If RodentGuard proves effective, it could be rolled out across the country within months. For now, farmers like Sarah Thompson are cautiously optimistic. 'We're desperate for anything that works. If this British tech can help, we'll take it.'
This is a developing story. We will bring you updates as the situation unfolds.









