Good morning folks. There is a health warning on the below. It will make you angry.
From Rob Sheldon - RDS Conservation 11th December 2018 Rob Sheldon - RDS Conservation 11th December 2018.
"Previous information on the subject of licensed Raven killing has shown that in England the numbers being legally killed are increasing. Ravens are being killed in Wales to protect livestock and to protect non-native pheasants released for the shooting industry.
In summary the total number of licences issued between January 2014 and July 2018 in England and Wales are 13, with up to 107 Ravens legally killed, thanks to permissions granted by the statutory conservation agencies.
Raven
What about Scotland? Earlier this year Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) issued a year-long research licence that permits the killing of 69 Ravens in the Strathbraan area of Highland Perthshire. This licence formed part of a proposed five-year experiment to allow the killing of 300 Ravens on the pretext of ‘seeing what happened’ to the breeding productivity of waders in the area, even though peer-reviewed scientific studies suggest Ravens are not responsible for wader population declines. The licence was quietly issued without prior consultation with other stakeholders, notably the Scottish Raptor Study Group (SRSG), whose members have been monitoring the local Raven population for over 30 years. Following a legal challenge by the SRSG, the licence was revised and the cull was suspended, although 39 Ravens had already been killed. Full details of the Strathbraan debacle can be found on the Raptor Persecution blog. Raptor Persecution
However, it appears that the Strathbraan licence was just the tip of a rather large Raven killing iceberg. What was unusual about the Strathbraan licence was that it was issued as a ‘research’ licence. Following a Freedom of Information request, details of other Raven licences have been made available. To compare the figures with England and Wales I asked for the number of licences issued between 2015 and 2018, as well as the details of those specific licences
The numbers are staggering. An incredible 621 licences have been issued in the last 4 years allowing for up to 4124 Ravens to be killed. Not all licence holders kill their allocation but approximately 75% of those permissible are killed (the figures aren’t available for 2018 yet). So in Scotland somewhere in the region of 3000 Ravens have been legally killed in the last 4 years (Table 1).
Licenses to kill Ravens - Scotland
Ravens killed in Wales
SNH has commissioned a scientific report from the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) to look at the population effects of the Raven killing. The results are yet to be released, but correspondence with SNH suggested it is working on a revised population size of 3241 pairs of Ravens. Including the non-breeding population, which could add approximately another 6500-13000 individuals, the population size seems to be in the region of 12,982-19,482. How allowing the licensed killing of approximately 700 Ravens (3-5% of the Scottish population) a year will impact on the overall population remains to be seen, but the commissioned report should give us some answers to many questions.
It is worth noting that in the recent bird trend data that was released by SNH, Ravens declined by 12% between 2016-17 (against the back drop of a longer term increase between 1994-2017 of 59%).
Variation in trends from year to year isn’t always easy to understand due to the range of pressures that any particular species faces. Given the significant culling of Ravens in Scotland it seems highly plausible that there must be an impact at the population level – hopefully the SNH commissioned report will shed some light on the implications of removing a minimum of 3000 Ravens from the Scottish population. Despite the early warnings of a recent decline in Raven numbers, it seems unlikely that there will be a decline in the numbers of licences to be issued."
Raven
Once again the pretext for the killing of birds is the protection of livestock, in this case sheep, when the major driver as always is the money made via the shooting industry, the rearing of Pheasants,
Grouse and Red-legged Partridge for what is termed “sport”. There is little evidence that Ravens are in any way influential in the decline of wader populations, rather that the decline in farmland populations of Curlew, Redshank, Lapwing and others is due to relentless agricultural changes and modifications to the way land is used.
6 comments:
Hello,
I am lost trying to figure out how a Raven can threaten a sheep? I think the hunting industry here takes precedence here too. I wonder what the hunters will shoot when nothing is left?
Good (?) morning Phil: There are words that I should not use, so I will refrain from doing so. It is really discouraging that these kinds of kills continue, for no reason other than bloodlust on the part of some humans. The fact that populations studies of various species and their synergistic relationship within a healthy ecosystem proves that none of this is nesessary means absolutely nothing to these barbarians. I am sure that they will never accept that a healthy ecosystem left alone will always regulate itself and that a normal degree of predation is beneficial, for so many well documented reasons I will not enumerate them here. Man is the cruelest and most insensitive predator of all, killing for pleasure, for “sport”, to satisfy misplaced notions of manhood - perhaps even womanhood these days, though I hope not. I cannot begin to express how sad I feel that this wonderful, intelligent bird is subjected to this constant aggression. Perhaps if someone could tell the Ravens in the Tower of London about the welfare of their fellows at large, they would find a way to leave the Tower and the kingdom would fall. And a good thing it would be too!
Hi Phil,
This really is news to me. I live near the south coast and rarely see a raven and yet our bird population is sinking. I thought ravens were a protected species.
As soon as I saw your words "a health warning" - "it will make you angry"
I just knew it would!
And it did!
All the best Jan
Having read your post after this one first, I can only say I am stunned by what the human race is doing. So very sad what the world is becoming. I am glad that I have no children, they would not grow up to not see the animals and birds that I have enjoyed all my life. Diane
Speechless.
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