Pauline Hanson has been temporarily banned from Twitter after suggesting protestors in Brisbane should be dispersed using electric cattle prods.

The Senator published a video showing her wearing an Akubra and walking through what looks to be a cattle station with a prod in her hand.

She suggested it be used to move on demonstrators who have taken to the streets in Queensland protesting environmental issues such as climate change and the Adani coal mine.

Pauline Hanson has been banned from Twitter. (Twitter)

"When the farmers have trouble getting the cattle up off the floor of the trucks, or in the cattle yards, they just touch them with this and they'll soon move; it doesn't matter how big the beast are, they will move with this," she said in the video.

Senator Hanson then suggested pitching the idea to Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk.

The video has been removed from Twitter but still appears on her Facebook page.

"I don't see how my tweet was somehow offensive and potentially harmful, if those tweets wishing I'd fall of Uluru are not," Senator Hanson said in a statement after the ban.

According to Twitter's suspension notice, Senator Hanson violated the social media platform's abuse and harassment rules.

"You may not engage in the targeted harassment of someone, or incite other people to do so. This includes wishing or hoping that someone experiences physical harm," Twitter said.