Animal Talk with Trisha McCagh

From Magpie Paralysis Mystery to Mobilisation — What Must Change Now

Trisha Season 1 Episode 8

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0:00 | 1:00:35

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🌿Episode Description 

In Part 2 of this urgent and uncompromising conversation, Animal Talk with Trisha McCagh moves from investigation to action. 

Joined once again by Dean Huxley, CEO of WA Wildlife Hospital, and Dr. Meg Rogers, wildlife veterinarian, Trisha dives deeper into the magpie paralysis syndrome — exploring what extensive testing has (and hasn’t) revealed, why identifying causes in wildlife disease is so complex, and what the long-term implications could be if meaningful intervention doesn’t occur. 

This episode exposes the uncomfortable realities behind wildlife rescue in Australia: 

• the true cost of disease investigations 

• the absence of government funding for operating costs 

• the reliance on exhausted volunteers 

• and the looming threat of avian influenza forcing wildlife centres to close their doors

From government spending priorities to habitat destruction, land clearing and corporate responsibility, this is a raw, passionate discussion about systemic failure — and collective power. 

The public is not powerless. Change begins when voices rise together. 


🐾 Episode Highlights 

Why the cause of the magpie paralysis syndrome remains unknown 

Why insect-eating birds may be more vulnerable 

The real cost of wildlife disease investigations (over $80,000 per study) 

What happens when wildlife hospitals receive zero government funding 

Why volunteers need training, governance, and financial backing Habitat destruction, land clearing, and preventable wildlife deaths 

Why advocacy — not sympathy — is the missing link 

How letters, petitions, and public pressure can drive policy change 


⏱ Key Talking Points 

00:00 – A plan is formed — and the public is invited in 

03:41 – Why magpies may be uniquely susceptible 

06:45 – Volunteers: essential, trained — and unsupported  

14:17 – Why public pressure is the fastest path to change 

17:32 – The true cost of wildlife research and care 

23:36 – The long-term goal: habitat protection, not band-aids 

31:09 – How the public can donate, advocate and get involved 


🚨 What You Can Do Right Now 

If you see a grounded or paralysed magpie, contact a wildlife rescue organisation immediately 

If five or more birds are sick or deceased in one area, call the Emergency Animal Disease Hotline before intervening 

Support wildlife hospitals through donations, volunteering 

Write to your local MP demanding funding for wildlife rescue and rehabilitation 


🤍 Support WA Wildlife Hospital 

Every donation directly supports veterinary care, treatment, medications, and emergency response for native animals. 

🔗⁠www.wawildlife.org.au⁠ 

👥 About the Guests Dean Huxley is the CEO of WA Wildlife Hospital and a leading advocate for wildlife rescue reform in Australia. 

Dr. Meg Rogers is a wildlife veterinarian at WA Wildlife Hospital, working on the frontline of native animal medicine. 

🔗support@wawildlife.org.au

PLUS - Animal News

Part 2 Trisha McCagh and fellow animal communicator Dana Saidi explore powerful shifts happening in animal welfare around the world. From groundbreaking legislation to compassionate initiatives, they go beyond the headlines to ask: what does this mean from the animals’ perspective?

A thought-provoking look at how global change reflects a deeper awakening in our relationship with animals. 

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www.animaltalk.com.au