Parakeet Cull ?

MartynK said:
Does it really matter if reds become extinct in the UK? Emotionally, yes; practically, not really. Most of the population is found in Scotland, and is descended from imported animals anyway. They're not rare or threatened elsewhere in Europe and breeding stock could be imported again.

Yes it does. Red squirrels are prey to pine martens and some birds of prey such as buzzards.

We don't know if a pine marten could catch or feed successfully on greys.

The cull is working. Just this evening we have spotted a red running into a wood that we cleared of greys just last week
 
If we are going to get rid of no-native species, what is being done about the awful grey squirrel?


See my sig, i`m doing my bit................:thumbs:

Oops too short, must type some banal drivel to get my sig to show. Hang on, ammunition for Brash and Cobra to take the urine.

Enough waffle now
 
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Wild boar seem to have re-established themselves without any help. The jury's still out on beavers as far as I'm concerned but, yes, the law of unintended consequences could come into play. Wolves and bears? I find that idea rather attractive but I can't see it happening outside a controlled environment, which isn't quite the same thing.

Never thought about beavers, they have released a few already haven't they ?
I do aggree that I would love to see wolves running free, if the same happened as in yellowstone they may even help keep the fox population under control, but to be honest I don't think there is enough wild food to sustain them so they would move to farm animals, so that will never happen.
Was interested to hear at the weekend that plans to reintroduce Pine Martins as the first carnivore have been shelved as some small groups have been found in england and they don't seem to be spreading so the thoughts are that they don't have the resources needed to survive countrywide
 
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Yes it does. Red squirrels are prey to pine martens and some birds of prey such as buzzards.

We don't know if a pine marten could catch or feed successfully on greys.

The cull is working. Just this evening we have spotted a red running into a wood that we cleared of greys just last week

Martens will predate reds Will, but because greys are on the floor more,are heavier and can`t get out onto thinner branches and are more abundant, then the martens find them easier to catch. Like any predator,they will take the easy option.

Where Pine Martens exist, grey populace invasion stops. Trust me...........;)

Martens biggest problem are gamekeepers. They predate floor nesting birds, which is just about all game birds.
 
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I am, you can`t beat a nice beaver.


Well you can, but I think that it's technically known as sadomasochism!

So you are 84 are you? Doesn't that beat Cedrics age?
icon_twisted.gif
 
Well you can, but I think that it's technically known as sadomasochism!

So you are 84 are you? Doesn't that beat Cedrics age?
icon_twisted.gif


I`m 86 at the minute. None trapped........;)


[YOUTUBE]zhyCL-ELRxg[/YOUTUBE]
 
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Yes it does. Red squirrels are prey to pine martens and some birds of prey such as buzzards.

We don't know if a pine marten could catch or feed successfully on greys.

The cull is working. Just this evening we have spotted a red running into a wood that we cleared of greys just last week

I don't follow your argument. Pine martens aren't specialist predators, and will take a range of birds, rodents, amphibians and insects. They also prey on grey squirrels, which are far easier for them to catch than reds, and experimental releases of these mustelids are proving quite successful as a control measure. Buzzards are opportunistic predators and also scavenge. They're very common around here and so are red squirrels - my neighbours and my sister in law have them visiting their gardens frequently - but young rabbits, rodents, ground nesting birds, invertebrates and carrion seems to form most of their diet.
 
You mean the content or the you tube clip.Looks there on my comp..............:shrug:

You know what I mean Ade ;) :D
(and yes I can see the youtube clip)
 
Ah, confused.com for a minute.

Back on topic,for a change, I would personally stop trapping them Will.Traps are indescriminate and kill whatever gets in them.That is fine for certain situations, but I would suggest less than ideal for a wooded area, you never know what may get in them. Go and buy some cages, but don`t drown the cuddly wee greys, you may end up being prosecuted by the buffoons at the RSPCA.

Is there anyway of loading pdf files onto here?
 
Never thought about beavers, they have released a few already haven't they ?
I do aggree that I would love to see wolves running free, if the same happened as in yellowstone they may even help keep the fox population under control, but to be honest I don't think there is enough wild food to sustain them so they would move to farm animals, so that will never happen.
Was interested to hear at the weekend that plans to reintroduce Pine Martins as the first thatcarnivore have been shelved as some small groups have been found in england and they don't seem to be spreading so the thoughts are that they don't have the resources needed to survive countrywide

Beavers were released in Argyll in 2009 and seem to be doing pretty well, but there's also a population in the Tay river system in Perthshire that probably escaped from private reserves or were released without permission years ago. The "authorities" aren't happy and ordered a trapping operation, but I believe it's being challenged in court.

I agree with you about wolf releases. Yellowstone covers about 3500 square miles, has plenty of food resources for the big predators which have always lived there, and is situated in the very remote NW of the United States. The US government also guaranteed to compensate ranchers for stock losses when wolves were reintroduced. I doubt if the UK will be able to find anywhere to release free ranging wolves without tramping on too many toes.
 
The pine marten statement was just saying that they have their uses. I never said they were specialist predators.

I just meant that no one has seen a pine marten reacting to a grey squirrel yet in britain, but I guess it is obvious really :)
fracster said:
Ah, confused.com for a minute.

Back on topic,for a change, I would personally stop trapping them Will.Traps are indescriminate and kill whatever gets in them.That is fine for certain situations, but I would suggest less than ideal for a wooded area, you never know what may get in them. Go and buy some cages, but don`t drown the cuddly wee greys, you may end up being prosecuted by the buffoons at the RSPCA.

Is there anyway of loading pdf files onto here?

We use cage traps and dispatch with a rifle. Kill traps are not good in my opinion.

I've done a lot of trapping, I know what I'm doing! ;)
 
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We use cage traps and dispatch with a rifle. Kill traps are not good in my opinion.

I've done a lot of trapping, I know what I'm doing! ;)

If they are used correctly there is a place for all the legal trapping methods :)
And with due respect I have been using them longer than you have been alive;)
 
Beavers were released in Argyll in 2009 and seem to be doing pretty well, but there's also a population in the Tay river system in Perthshire that probably escaped from private reserves or were released without permission years ago. The "authorities" aren't happy and ordered a trapping operation, but I believe it's being challenged in court.

I agree with you about wolf releases. Yellowstone covers about 3500 square miles, has plenty of food resources for the big predators which have always lived there, and is situated in the very remote NW of the United States. The US government also guaranteed to compensate ranchers for stock losses when wolves were reintroduced. I doubt if the UK will be able to find anywhere to release free ranging wolves without tramping on too many toes.

Yep I remember hearing somewhere that they had released beavers, didn't realise it was scotland, can';t understand why they want a cull on the escapees though, surely it proives they are doing well in the wild and isn't that the point of reintroduction :shrug:
Wolves yep I totally agree, the country is far too populated now to make it viable and safe in many ways
 
We can't use kill traps because we have reds still round our area. Where do you trap cobra? :)
Ah I see what you are saying now, you never specified Kania's and the like, in your post
You just blanket dismissed "kill traps".
So what you meant to say was that you wouldn't use Kania's, fenns etc for
Squirrels as you had a red population as well.
If that is the case, then of course the only safe action would be live catch traps for squirrels.

As a rough guide ( but not exclusively) I operate around the herts, beds bucks, northants areas
 
Kill traps are not good in my opinion.

I've done a lot of trapping, I know what I'm doing! ;)

Kill traps,fens for example, have a definate use , being an experienced trapper, I thought you would have known that?
 
The pine marten statement was just saying that they have their uses. I never said they were specialist predators.

I don't follow your argument. I suggested that it doesn't really matter if reds become extinct in the UK, from a practical point of view. You're entitled to disagree, but you responded that "Yes it does. Red squirrels are prey to pine martens and some birds of prey such as buzzards". What did you mean, if you weren't saying that pine martens and buzzards are dependent, or partly dependent, on reds as a food resource? They're not, even remotely.
 
MartynK said:
I don't follow your argument. I suggested that it doesn't really matter if reds become extinct in the UK, from a practical point of view. You're entitled to disagree, but you responded that "Yes it does. Red squirrels are prey to pine martens and some birds of prey such as buzzards". What did you mean, if you weren't saying that pine martens and buzzards are dependent, or partly dependent, on reds as a food resource? They're not, even remotely.

I just meant that the red squirrel has it's uses as it is prey to those two species. Never did I say they would die out if reds are gone.
 
Cormorants I sort of agree with ( but if fishing lakes hadnt been kept at such unnaturally high stock levels you'd have no problem)

Otters though, really? Ignoring all the conservation efforts to improve the population, and that a healthy population is both evidence of a healthy river system ( surely that's good for fishermen?) and there's evidence they keep mink out if that was even suggested sport fishing would probably never recover from the damage it would cause to it's image

I agree that overstocked fisheries are easy pickings for both otters and the black death', but that's by-the-by now; fisheries and the UK fishing trade is worth hundreds of millions to the UK economy and to retain that part of the economy, steps have to be taken to make sure fisheries can remain a viable business.

My main problem with the otter problem is the fact they are wiping out - in a very, very short period of time - many huge river fish (mainly barbel) that have taken years to grow on, never mind the younger year classes that are the back-up generations. Although we always quote the 'nature will find a balance' maxim, in this case I think that's a dream; to reintroduce a double-figure barbel would cost a massive amount of money, money that has to come from clubs, fishery owners and in the case of waters under the sole management of the EA, the license payers. License sales are apparently booming according to the EA (think it was 1.8 million last year) but there are many other issues to deal with from that pot. I'd happily pay £50 or even a £100 per season to keep the sport (and industry) that I love in good health, but alas not everyone shares that view and let's face it, not everyone can afford it. The general public think fish just happen to appear from fresh air and that waterways maintain themselves but they're way off the mark in that respect.

You mention a healthy river system - it's a good point I agree with - and without doubt, otters do represent a healthy natural environment when there is a balance of hunter-to-prey. But now we don't have that balance because of stocked commercials that provide a ready source of food, the damage done to waters that aren't as easy to manage isn't easy to write off or stomach when it's your livelihood that depends on people going fishing.


Otters have been reintroduced to rivers without a sustainable population of food for them thanks to cormorants, pollution and crayfish. This has led them to hunt on still waters where they catch enourmous carp, take a few bites and leave for dead. These fish cost thousands of pounds to replace and some may be older than you.

It's a case of reintroduction as political tool rather than sustainability.

Good points well put there Dean - in many cases, it's the liver and head they go for, leaving the rest of the fish for the rats, most of the time while it's still living. There's a youtube video somewhere of a fish half-eaten by an otter that's still squirming - it's quite shocking.

thats highly debatable. As of course is the wisdom of stocking a lake with slow moving (normally non native) fish species then feeding them high protein food so they develop massive bellies and of course they are easier to take. And doing it next to an otter river as well :nuts:.

As I said if fisherman managed to fish just on natural stock levels then they'd be few of the problems with cormorants and should they even suggest culling otters then they'd do their reputation (which, lets be honest, is recovering, but at times over the last 20 year has been pretty poor) irreparable damage.

We have pretty-much an entire non-native fish population ever since the Roman's set foot on our island. But that's history; this is now....

The overfeeding of fish is debatable - I don't particularly love big fish but photographing them keeps a roof over my head - but that aside, it's what many anglers want in an age where instant gratification has pretty much seeped into every thing we do. Some anglers can't wait to do an apprenticeship and want a forty today; others like to play the long game, either through choice or through the limitations of their skill.

Either way, in many cases it involves a long economic chain that accumulates into a tidy sum that benefits that's country's economy greatly. That can't be emphisised enough.

Again, it's debatable as to what effect on the public perception of angling a 'control' of otter populations would have but as no angling body would have anything to do with it, I can't see the point you're trying to make. I don't know if ultimately it's DEFRA or the EA's call - what I do know is that lessons have to be learned from the cormorant problem and learned fast.... :)

The last otter reintroduction was 1999 and the vast majority have recolonised naturally. Otters scoff crayfish in abundance hence the similar expansion paths of both them and signals'.

I'm afraid that I've got little sympathy for large carp fishing, but I would have thought that you'd be more concerned about Eastern Europeans than otters?

I know very little about crays other than they like cat food and they nip!!

Don't have sympathy for big-carp fishers... they bring it on themselves, all those pot noodles and beer belies!!! :lol:

As for eastern Europeans, that's a problem in fishing that unfortunately has to be addressed at a higher government levels where immigration matters must be addressed first....
 
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I agree that overstocked fisheries are easy pickings for both otters and the black death', but that's by-the-by now; fisheries and the UK fishing trade is worth hundreds of millions to the UK economy and to retain that part of the economy, steps have to be taken to make sure fisheries can remain a viable business.

I'd agree with you there, but DEFRA has publish quite a long consultation on how to protect a fishery from otters where they are a problem.http://www.environment-agency.gov.u...water_fisheriesv4_080501_FINAL_PRINT-CGS3.pdf I realise that this involves spending cash and not every business would cope with this but TBH tough they wouldn't be the first or last groups of businesses to go under because of environmental issues, and they do get grants to cover some of the cost of this. Of course there are other issues, firstly you can't really be advocating eradicating a native species to the benefit of only one (relatively small) group of UK business and secondly if you do that then it follow follows you'd advocate the eradication of every species that causes an issue to any UK business. Localised culling is a very short term solution.


My main problem with the otter problem is the fact they are wiping out - in a very, very short period of time - many huge river fish (mainly barbel) that have taken years to grow on, never mind the younger year classes that are the back-up generations. Although we always quote the 'nature will find a balance' maxim, in this case I think that's a dream; to reintroduce a double-figure barbel would cost a massive amount of money, money that has to come from clubs, fishery owners and in the case of waters under the sole management of the EA, the license payers. License sales are apparently booming according to the EA (think it was 1.8 million last year) but there are many other issues to deal with from that pot. I'd happily pay £50 or even a £100 per season to keep the sport (and industry) that I love in good health, but alas not everyone shares that view and let's face it, not everyone can afford it. The general public think fish just happen to appear from fresh air and that waterways maintain themselves but they're way off the mark in that respect.

I'm not sure how the recovery of a population of native animals, largely organically, and the improvements to the river environment that have helped this can be described as a problem, but that just semantics. I'm not naive enough to think that fish appear from thin air and waterways maintain themselves, but by the same count its not just fishermen who maintain the waterways, theres a whole heap of leisure industry around our rivers and I'm sure most of the others won't support a cull.

You mention a healthy river system - it's a good point I agree with - and without doubt, otters do represent a healthy natural environment when there is a balance of hunter-to-prey. But now we don't have that balance because of stocked commercials that provide a ready source of food, the damage done to waters that aren't as easy to manage isn't easy to write off or stomach when it's your livelihood that depends on people going fishing.

I struggle ( & correct me if I'm wrong) to believe waterways, some widely fished, outside of managed fisheries are stocked intentionally by those commercial fisheries. Those commercial (and thats the key word) can take effective measures to protect their businesses. Like every animal at the top of the food chain, you don't see over population.


Good points well put there Dean - in many cases, it's the liver and head they go for, leaving the rest of the fish for the rats, most of the time while it's still living. There's a youtube video somewhere of a fish half-eaten by an otter that's still squirming - it's quite shocking.

if they catch a large fish then maybe, but as a non fisherman, its equally shocking to see a keep net full of large and obviously distressed fish held by an angler

We have pretty-much an entire non-native fish population ever since the Roman's set foot on our island. But that's history; this is now....

The overfeeding of fish is debatable - I don't particularly love big fish but photographing them keeps a roof over my head - but that aside, it's what many anglers want in an age where instant gratification has pretty much seeped into every thing we do. Some anglers can't wait to do an apprenticeship and want a forty today; others like to play the long game, either through choice or through the limitations of their skill.

TBH, as a non angler I can understand you're love of the sport, but at the same time I also think its kind of weak argument that some anglers want instant gratification. Thats their problem and if they aren't prepared to put effort in why should they be able to influence what happens to the environment around them?

Either way, in many cases it involves a long economic chain that accumulates into a tidy sum that benefits that's country's economy greatly. That can't be emphisised enough.

The last I read it was about £3.6bn and about 16,000 jobs. In all seriousness though, are you seriously suggesting that and industry of that size can't manage to fund protecting itself, and there are effective ways. Its a business, albeit it one run for sportsmen, but if your costs go up, and you need to do what every other business does and put your prices up, or go under, I know some will. I know thats sad, but at the end of the day lots of other businesses will go under as a result of environmental and legislative changes. Just because its fishing doesn't make it special in that way. I remember the change from lead shot in fishing some years ago, and I also remember a fair number of economic arguments then. The industry survived didn't it?

Again, it's debatable as to what effect on the public perception of angling a 'control' of otter populations would have but as no angling body would have anything to do with it, I can't see the point you're trying to make. I don't know if ultimately it's DEFRA or the EA's call - what I do know is that lessons have to be learned from the cormorant problem and learned fast.... :)

The angling industry is the only body thats suggesting any form of cull. From a non angling perspective its just another daft call from a sport, that has shown little consideration for its environment beyond its very narrow needs. I do agree that something needs to be learned from whats happened with cormorants, but I think some searching questions need to be asked about the causes of their inland population explosion, and I certainly think that simply saying overstocked fisheries are by the by isn't any way forward. Even if you could just shoot every one on an inland waterway if you didn't do something about the causes then in 20 years they'd be a problem again. I grew up about 3 miles down the road from Holme Pierrepont and I know how much damage they've caused there, but if you sit in my folks garden watching the river 3 miles upstream you may see the odd one, but its not stocked of course so a far more normal level of fish. To my mind the simple answer lies just there. You could just fish lakes fenced to keep the otters out, under nets to keep the cormorant out but it would be very sterile.

I know very little about crays other than they like cat food and they nip!!

Otters eat them

Don't have sympathy for big-carp fishers... they bring it on themselves, all those pot noodles and beer belies!!! :lol:

As for eastern Europeans, that's a problem in fishing that unfortunately has to be addressed at a higher government levels where immigration matters must be addressed first....

no your straying very close to politics :)

H
 
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I'd agree with you there, but DEFRA has publish quite a long consultation on how to protect a fishery from otters where they are a problem.http://www.environment-agency.gov.u...water_fisheriesv4_080501_FINAL_PRINT-CGS3.pdf I realise that this involves spending cash and not every business would cope with this but TBH tough they wouldn't be the first or last groups of businesses to go under because of environmental issues, and they do get grants to cover some of the cost of this. Of course there are other issues, firstly you can't really be advocating eradicating a native species to the benefit of only one (relatively small) group of UK business and secondly if you do that then it follow follows you'd advocate the eradication of every species that causes an issue to any UK business. Localised culling is a very short term solution......

Totally agree that on privately-run fisheries the owners do have to take responsibility towards protecting their stock but when the threat can be contained at the source, so to speak, then why not look at that route instead?

I'm not advocating eradication. I'm advocating a structured plan of action that maintains a balance of nature that sits alongside a massive industry that exists, whether you like it or not. Fisheries of the commercial variety are here to stay and they have to be figured into the balance of nature but not hung out to dry because they haven't been around since the year dot. As I've said, fisheries will not be the decision-makers but they will put their side of the story across to make sure they are represented fairly and not looked down on as a niche industry, which they most definitely are not.

.....I'm not sure how the recovery of a population of native animals, largely organically, and the improvements to the river environment that have helped this can be described as a problem, but that just semantics. I'm not naive enough to think that fish appear from thin air and waterways maintain themselves, but by the same count its not just fishermen who maintain the waterways, theres a whole heap of leisure industry around our rivers and I'm sure most of the others won't support a cull......

I didn't suggest you were naive, just that many members of the general public don't quite understand how anglers contribute greatly to the maintenace of waterways.

My other point is canoeists, boaters, powered watersports users and those on the towpath don't rely on water quality and fish stocks to participate in their pastime. Anglers do. Anything that can threaten that sport has to be dealt with by the relevant authorities in the appropriate manner. If that means a cull, backed up by the data to support that decision, then fine. If not a cull, but a movement of population, then again, if the data supports it then that's how it has to work.

...I struggle ( & correct me if I'm wrong) to believe waterways, some widely fished, outside of managed fisheries are stocked intentionally by those commercial fisheries. Those commercial (and thats the key word) can take effective measures to protect there businesses. Like every animal at the top of the food chain, you don't see over population......

Yes, commercial fisheries by their very nature as a commercial enterprise, stock and manage their stock carefully and with mortality rates figured into their economic year, although when unwanted predators make the fishery their home then obviously financial strains are placed on the fishery. But natural waterways, or those not run as a commercial enterprise (canals for example) receive stocking but in the cases of clubs (of which there are many, albeit with generally small memberships) they have limited funds to maintain a level of stocking and if stocks diminish through predation then they are looking for finances where there are none.

....if they catch a large fish then maybe, but as a non fisherman, its equally shocking to see a keep net full of large and obviously distressed fish held by an angler.....

I debate the distress angle. But I fear by your stance as a non-angler (and mine as a life-long angler) we'd be wasting our time if we covered that subject. I'll leave that to the scientists. :thumbs:

....TBH, as a non angler I can understand you're love of the sport, but at the same time I also think its s kind of weak argument that some anglers want instant gratification. Thats there problem and if they aren't prepared to put effort in why should they be able to influence what happens to the environment around them?.....

It's not a weak argument, it's just a sign of the times. I can remember when I started angling there was no way on earth I could experience sport that can be had today. I did my apprenticeship and I'm proud that I love angling as a whole, and not just for the catching of fish. Unfortunately, those who want a quick fix exist and but they play a big part in keeping the angling industry going. When the rivers took a nosedive thanks to pollution back in the 80s and 90s, commercials played their part in keeping anglers interested when rivers were all but dead. Without them the UK angling industry wouldn't be where it's at now. I'm grateful for that and if that keeps people coming into the sport, especially kids who may be doing other less wholesome activities, surely there's a case for giving it a helping hand once in a while?

....The last I read it was about £3.6bn and about 16,000 jobs. In all seriousness though, are you seriously suggesting that and industry of that size can't manage to fund protecting itself, and there are effective ways. Its a business, albeit it one run for sportsmen, but if your costs go up, and you need to do what every other business does and put your prices up, or go under, I know some will. I know that sad, but at the end of the day lots of other businesses will go under as a result of environmental and legislative changes. Just because its fishing doesn't make it special in that way. I remember the change from lead shot in fishing some years ago, and I also remember a fair number of economic arguments then. The industry survived didn't it?.....

It did survive, no arguing about that, but the use of lead shot wasn't eradicated (it's still in use today) and to be fair, lead shot isn't one of the major financial incomes of the angling industry nor one that's required by all anglers. All it meant was we (anglers) moaned about having to use alloy shot that A) was harder, so therefore more difficult to cut and remove, and B) it wasn't great to move on the line because it damages it more (among other reasons). Plus, using alloy shot was just something we had to do - there were still fish to be caught, unlike these days in certain waterways.

....The angling industry is the only body thats suggesting any form of cull. From a non angling perspective its just another daft call from a sport, that has shown little consideration for it environment beyond its very narrow needs. I do agree that something needs to be learned from whats happened with cormorants, but I think some searching questions need to be asked about the causes of their inland population explosion, and I certainly think that simply saying overstocked fisheries are by the by isn't any way forward. Even if you could just shoot every one on an inland waterway if you didn't do something about the causes then in 20 years they'd be a problem again. I grew up about 3 miles down the road from Holme Pierrepont and I know how much damage they've caused there, but if you sit in my folks garden watching the river 3 miles upstream you may see the odd one, but its not stocked of course so a far more normal level of fish. To my mind the simple answer lies just there. You could just fish lakes fenced to keep the otters out, under nets to keep the cormorant out but it would be very sterile. .....

There have been culls suggested because it's the only industry that relies on fish stocks to be available. It's not daft, it's important to the longevity of a sport that is part of British culture for many millions.

Of course, overfishing of the sea hasn't helped in the case of cormorants, but why do UK fishery owners and anglers have to bear the brunt of EU policies miles out to sea?

As for Holme - it was the 1994 world champs that made people sit up and realise that there could be a problem. It was in decline running up to the event but even with additional stocks, it fared no better; the cormorants came in their droves and ate their fill. These days the Trent is in reasonable shape - more fish (big fish anyway) and it's cleaner - but the cormorants have moved to the fisheries and to be fair, they don't favour large conurbations like Nottingham so I don't expect the embankment to be awash with them.

....Otters eat them.....

:)

....no your straying very close to politics :).....

...and that's somewhere I am not going :lol:

H[/QUOTE]
 
Hi Pat,

I'm guessing on this one neither of us is going to want to shift to the others viewpoint. Maybe best if we just agree to disagree :thumbs .
 
Hi Pat,

I'm guessing on this one neither of us is going to want to shift to the others viewpoint. Maybe best if we just agree to disagree :thumbs .

Hugh - an excellent decision... I fear if we carried on our fingers would be worn down to bloody stumps with all this typing!!! :lol:
 
Interesting reading Hugh and Pat, thanks for your input :thumbs:
 
Pat, do you agree that the cormorants are coming inland due to the lack of fish in the seas and because we have stocked waters? Apologies if you have answered that above,I have only skimmed the posts.

Secondly, is the cormorant problem pushing the otters to taking fish that they would not normally? IME, otters take eels and injured fish before healthy fish. I can only talk from experience of river otters not still water ones, so I may be wrong on that score.

Personally, I would rather have otters around than cormorants. I`m not an angler anymore, so have no real problem with otters. Though a lot of the anglers I meet on the rivers up here, salmon and sea trout rivers, would kill anything that did eat fish. I firmly believe that some of them are involved in the persecution of protected birds and animals, which is quite sad really.

Surely, if the fish are prevelant, then they will attract predators. The problem is, I believe, that the heavily stocked fisheries are attracting predators that are not the norm. But I really cannot see a way around that, other than an open season on cormorants. But where do we draw the line? Gooseanders and otters? Natural selection would suggest that the more fish we have, then the more predators there will be, less fish, then the weaker predators perish.

Take the enormous increase in the sparrowhawk population as more people feed garden birds all year round,as an example.

Always seem the more we mess with nature, the more we dislike the outcome. She can ,usually , manage fine on her own.

Be interested to hear your thoughts Pat..........:thumbs:
 
Just a sneaky thought:

I wonder how many fishermen that complain about the current otter and cormorant problem now also berated gamekeepers as evil for controlling their raptor population a few years ago, on the basis that shooting was a 'posh' sport?
 
Just a sneaky thought:

I wonder how many fishermen that complain about the current otter and cormorant problem now also berated gamekeepers as evil for controlling their raptor population a few years ago, on the basis that shooting was a 'posh' sport?

Probably the same ones who were anti hunting :D
 
Just a sneaky thought:

I wonder how many fishermen that complain about the current otter and cormorant problem now also berated gamekeepers as evil for controlling their raptor population a few years ago, on the basis that shooting was a 'posh' sport?

I didn't, I know that - but then again I work for a company that also produces shooting magazines and I quite like a bit of shooting, albeit I've only ever shot clays (I shot a crow once with an air rifle)....

I don't know to be honest. There are probably a lot who look at other countryside sports like hunting and shooting as one for the toffs, but judging by the numbers at the CLA game fair last week, there seems to be a good co-existence. Okay, the shooters probably outnumbered the anglers 5:1 but it's a good place to start....

Fortunately (for shooters anyway) there isn't a neccessity for a natural quarry to be present - they have clays if no natural targets are available - which isn't a luxury that anglers have. I can't see much of a market for clay fish :lol:


Probably the same ones who were anti hunting :D

Again, I don't think there was much anti-hunting feeling within angling, at least not within the circles I mixed with and the readership of my mag that I conversed with on a regular basis. I'd say those with a problem were a very, very small minority who didn't really know what views they should hold.

Yes, many used to have little snipes at the 'establishment' for being toffy-nosed and all that, because they hunted, drove around in 4x4s and shot grouse (etc, etc), but I think it was more the class thing kicking in rather than any real disdain for those involved in those sports.
 
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Pat, do you agree that the cormorants are coming inland due to the lack of fish in the seas and because we have stocked waters? Apologies if you have answered that above,I have only skimmed the posts.

I think there's too strong a link to ignore it. I am no scientist and I have only read what has been available to me in the past (and half of it I can't remember), so I'm not the authority on the exact reasons, but it's hard to escape the fact that there have been patterns of bird population movement associated with heavily stocked fisheries becoming widely established.

Secondly, is the cormorant problem pushing the otters to taking fish that they would not normally? IME, otters take eels and injured fish before healthy fish. I can only talk from experience of river otters not still water ones, so I may be wrong on that score.

The eel thing was something I was unaware of until I had a chat to a fisheries manager but of course, eel populations are dying out in an astonishing rate so there must be a link there as to why otters have moved onto bigger prey. I have talked to quite a few fishery owners who either own rivers or have access to them, and they all say the same thing; they've seen a sharp drop in numbers of big fish like barbel and a rise in the number of carcasses they've found that have been mutilated and only half-eaten. Like Hugh says, mink are somewhere in the equation so maybe otters are unfairly named as the sole target, but it's no surprise that where this activity has happened the otters have become more populated and definitely bolder in their search for food.

Personally, I would rather have otters around than cormorants. I`m not an angler anymore, so have no real problem with otters. Though a lot of the anglers I meet on the rivers up here, salmon and sea trout rivers, would kill anything that did eat fish. I firmly believe that some of them are involved in the persecution of protected birds and animals, which is quite sad really.

Personally, I'd rather have both species around but in numbers that relate to a more even system where ultimately, we don't have to employ control means. But maybe that's something that won't happen and like I've said in earlier posts, regarding cormorants, I think there are more factors involved, such as sea fish stocks diminishing.

Regarding the persecution of birds in general, especially rare ones, I think that's probably down to those individuals being lacking in the common sense to conduct themselves in the correct manner. There are always groups that decide to take a more radical approach to getting their way....

Surely, if the fish are prevelant, then they will attract predators. The problem is, I believe, that the heavily stocked fisheries are attracting predators that are not the norm. But I really cannot see a way around that, other than an open season on cormorants. But where do we draw the line? Gooseanders and otters? Natural selection would suggest that the more fish we have, then the more predators there will be, less fish, then the weaker predators perish.

Take the enormous increase in the sparrowhawk population as more people feed garden birds all year round,as an example.

It is a worry as to where it will stop - like I said, I am not one of those collecting the data, just one of those seeing the results of something that doesn't stack up. I know herons seem to be everywhere these days and according to many fishery owners, they're as bad as the cormorants. Whether they are is debatable; it could be that those fishery owners are just sick of anything that eats their stock and everything is now tarred with the same brush without the facts being fully explored...

Always seem the more we mess with nature, the more we dislike the outcome. She can ,usually , manage fine on her own.

We are a meddlesome species indeed. ..... :)
 
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Again, I don't think there was much anti-hunting feeling within angling, at least not within the circles I mixed with and the readership of my mag that I conversed with on a regular basis. I'd say those with a problem were a very, very small minority who didn't really know what views they should hold.

Yes, many used to have little snipes at the 'establishment' for being toffy-nosed and all that, because they hunted, drove around in 4x4s and shot grouse (etc, etc), but I think it was more the class thing kicking in rather than any real disdain for those involved in those sports.

I guess that as there were whispers of a bill being put up to ban fishing at some time then it's best for everuyone to stick together :D
 
Gremlin - yep, the Countryside Alliance marches were well supported by angles, although the majority were those who were directly affected by changes to how we hunt. Maybe the favour would be returned if fishing did come in for the chop - we can only hope it never comes to that point....:)
 
Well if the marches were as peaceful as the CA ones, despite the best efforts of the antis, then I would come along again, and I'll never forget the comment in the paper about the lack of litter there was to clear up afterwards :D
Shows who cares more about the countryside doesn't it, we took our litter home or binned it properly :thumbs:
 
We can't use kill traps because we have reds still round our area. Where do you trap cobra? :)

Where do you trap cobra? well away from the UK, I hope! Add the comma after trap and the question gets answered.
 
Where do you trap cobra? well away from the UK, I hope! Add the comma after trap and the question gets answered.

P:lol:M:lol:S:lol:L
 
I just meant that no one has seen a pine marten reacting to a grey squirrel yet in britain, but I guess it is obvious really :)

Where did you get the little gem from Will?
 
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