Plans are
afoot to reintroduce
beavers, wildcats and wolves
to habitats in Britain from
which they have long
disappeared. But is it right
to offer a helpful human
hand or is this immoral
manmade meddling?
Picture a forest. A
Scottish crossbill rummages
for conifer cones, a
capercaillie fans its tail,
a red deer skulks in the
shadows, while a beaver
gnaws thoughtfully on a
tree.
It could be a classic
picture of wildlife in
Scotland, but for one thing.
No beavers. Hunted for their
pelts, there have been no
wild beavers in the UK since
at least the 16th Century.
Now two groups in
Scotland plan to remedy
that. The Scottish Wildlife
Trust and the Royal
Zoological Society of
Scotland have submitted an
application to the Scottish
minister for the environment
to bring back beavers in a
small-scale experiment which
could lead to a wider
reintroduction.
Such "reintroductions"
are now a common tactic in
the global conservation
movement, with plans in the
UK to reintroduce wildcats
and bring wolves back to
Scotland.
The measures are aimed at
restoring habitats and
providing a more natural
path to conservation.
Wouldn't it be better to
control the deer population
in Scotland with wolves,
rather than rely on man-made
methods, the proponents
suggest.
Poetic return
But reintroductions are
not without controversy. In
mainland Europe, the
reintroduction of bears and
wolves has met with
hostility from farmers
worried about livestock
being killed.
And there is a key
question. Should man attempt
to manipulate habitats and
eco-systems, even if only to
repair the damage done by
man in the past?
There is a certain poetry
in the return of some
animals, something
compellingly romantic about
a wolf staring cold-eyed out
of a snowy forest. And the
beaver has its own appeal.
If wolves
are
reintroduced
would
hunting them
be allowed?
|
The Scottish Wildlife
Trust talks of a
"charismatic creature",
citing a study which
estimates that
beaver-tourism could be
worth £101 per household.
Regarded as a "keystone"
species, beavers will help
renew and create wetland
which will help "frogs,
toads, water voles,
dragonflies, birds and
fish".
But in Estonia, the
return of the beaver has
caused problems.
"Beavers have caused
floods in forests, which
means the forest may perish
because of the excessive
damp," says Kaarel Roht,
senior specialist in the
forest department at the
Ministry of the Environment.
"Beavers can also close
drainage canals with dams to
get the food, flooding big
areas of land and hindering
agriculture."
Culling question
And the solution to this?
In 2006, 7,368 beavers were
killed in Estonia.
This raises a serious
question. Is it acceptable
to reintroduce a species
which then has to be
controlled with culling?
Professor Andrew Linzey,
director of the Oxford
Centre for Animal Ethics,
says no.
 |
BEAVER TRIAL
-
Application
for
trial in
Knapdale
Forest,
Argyll
-
15-20
beavers
in
control
zone
-
Trial
could
start
spring
2009
-
Aim to
create
more
wetland
-
First
wild
beavers
since
1500s
|
"It can't be ethical to
introduce a species which
one is then going to kill.
Many people who want to
reintroduce species don't
seem to have an
understanding that ecology
is an evolving process.
"To reintroduce a species
after hundreds of years is
to profoundly disturb that
ecology. There is no
pristine state we can move
back to."
But this ethical position
is diametrically opposed to
that of the conservation
fraternity.
Craig Hilton-Taylor,
manager of the Red List Unit
at the World Conservation
Union (IUCN), says culling
is sometimes necessary.
Last resort
In Africa, after years of
conservation work, including
animals being moved to new
areas, the elephant
population has risen in many
countries to the point where
culling is seen as necessary
by the authorities.
"You want to keep the
balance in the system. You
have to allow culling... but
the thing for us is that it
is humane," says Dr
Hilton-Taylor.
Accepting culling as a
last resort,
conservationists focus their
efforts on making sure
reintroductions are
sufficiently well-evaluated
that episodes of dramatic
overpopulation and animals
failing to thrive in areas
are kept to a minimum.
Attitudes
towards
beaver
culling
would be
hard to
predict
(Picture:
Niall Benvie)
|
"There are lots of
reintroductions happening
without them being well
thought through. Huge
amounts of money gets spent
on these things," says Dr
Hilton-Taylor
"In the case of gharial
[Indian crocodile-like
reptiles], 10,000 animals
had been put back into the
wild but the success rate
has been appalling, losing
them so rapidly."
If beavers should be
re-introduced across
Scotland or indeed across
the whole of the UK, no-one
can guarantee that in 20
years they will not have
thrived to the point of
needing to be culled.
And how the British
public will react to the
prospect of cute beavers
being killed is anybody's
guess.
The Confederation of
Forest Industries is,
needless to say, worried
about the prospect of
beavers returning, and it
questions exactly how
"native" beavers can be
regarded as in its
submission to the beaver
consultation exercise.
Profound disturbance
"Due to the interval
since beavers were extant in
GB (around 400 years) the
proposal is in reality one
of an introduction of an
alien species, and that into
a completely different,
man-made environment
compared to that which
existed all those centuries
ago."
It is a sentiment that
Prof Linzey agrees with.
"It is a big mistake to
treat it as though it was a
page with holes that have to
be filled because they were
once filled.
Scottish
wildcats
must be
shown to be
a separate
species
(Picture:
Neville
Buck)
|
"An act of introduction
is an act of profound
disturbance. It needs to be
looked at very carefully
indeed."
The plans to reintroduce
wolves in Scotland could be
timed to coincide with the
return of beavers, in the
hope they would help manage
the population. But no-one
can say that the wolf and
beaver will thrive to the
same degree.
And exactly how one
chooses to interfere with
habitats is a complicated
business.
The Aspinall Foundation
is working on a plan to
reintroduce the native
"wildcat" or reinforce a
current population, using
captive animals. It is said
there are still wildcats in
Scotland.
But before an application
is made, there must be a
study of the DNA of the
captive animals. If they
prove not to be a separate
species from the domestic
cat, the reintroduction plan
will go no further.
If they are demonstrated
to be separate it will
provide another battleground
for the proponents of
species reintroductions and
those who favour a different
approach.