Thank you for strengthening the archive.
Your report helps turn scattered 1080 signs, notices, alerts and source links into public accountability. We use local reports to check what is publicly listed, identify missing or unclear warnings, and strengthen the monthly 1080 Watch Map archive.
Your report becomes part of the evidence trail.
The report you submitted helps the Coalition Against 1080 Poison compare local information with what agencies and operators make publicly available. That matters because public 1080 information is often scattered across signs, park notices, agency pages, local updates and source links.
If you have photos, screenshots, videos or documents connected to your report, please email them to info@ban1080.org.au so we can connect the supporting material with your submission.
Safety first: do not enter baiting areas, approach bait material, disturb signage, or put yourself or animals at risk to collect evidence.
Keep the public map updated.
The 1080 Watch Map is free to use because this information should be public. Keeping it updated, checking source material, maintaining the tool and expanding the transparency audit nationally takes ongoing work.
