- Lynx will likely take sheep
- Compensation will not make sheep mortalities acceptable
- Previous reintroductions have been problematic
- Suggested migration measures are not practical
- Engagement with the agricultural sector has been lacking
It may be that the lovely wild cats that still roam the wild and isolated areas of Europe will not be coming our way anytime soon.
But parts of the Lake District, including Ennerdale, have not been ruled out entirely as future sites for the return of the Lynx to the UK last spotted in the wild just 1,300 years ago.
It's just that the Lynx UK Trust, a charity dedicated to reintroducing the big cat, may find that other potential sites, including neighbouring Kielder Forest, could provide a "more suitable home" for the first five-year pilot project that could see the release of three male and three female animals of breeding age from Europe.
Dr Ian Convery "It is less likely to be Cumbria at the moment, but there are sites in the county which we may explore sometime in the future," said Ian Convery, associate professor of conservation and forestry at the University of Cumbria and Lynx UK Trust.
In answer to the suggestion that the big cats would feed on the county's sheep population, Mr Convery claimed it was all a "red herring".
He said about six million sheep deaths occur in the UK as a result of poor husbandry and exposure.
"The National Sheep Association needs to get its own house in order first. Lynx are not sheep predators.
"The cats are forest dwelling animals and all the evidence from Europe suggests 0.4 sheep mortality every year, compared to 700 sheep per year being killed by dogs and nearly 2,000 lambs each year taken by foxes. We're only planning to trial three to five lynx, so any sheep mortality will be extremely low by comparison," said Mr Convery.
These sentiments were shared by David Harpley, conservation manager for the Cumbria Wildlife Trust, who said there was going to be no "significant" impact on sheep numbers. "We are only talking about trialling a few lynx. I do not know what all the fuss is about."
"Kielder is a likely site. It is big enough for lynx to live in. You could do trials in Ennerdale, but I would say it is not really big enough to anything more than a trial," he added.
David Harpley Lynx, said Mr Harpley, were shy creatures, and would not be running across fields. Mostly people will not even know they are there. The trial will involve them being radio-collared. The trust will know exactly where they are."
The charity first proposed the move in 2015 and hopes the trial will start "as soon as possible." But Mr Convery added they were not tied to any specific timescale. "We just need to follow due process."
"The NSA report raises questions regarding habitat suitability. We do have suitable areas in the UK, though of course any potential site for a trial lynx reintroduction needs to be carefully considered, including extensive habit modelling and ecosystem assessment studies prior to lynx being with ongoing monitoring of habitat suitability, and ecosystem change during the trial itself," said Mr Convery.
"We are not talking about bringing over 200 lynx from Germany. We are talking about a controlled trial. We are talking about the benefits it could bring our farmers and the local economy," said Mr Convery.
"If we reintroduce lynx it would bring £9 million a year to the local economy," he added.
In July the trust will apply for a licence for a single unfenced site in one of five locations in Cumbria, Norfolk, Northumberland, Argyll and Aberdeenshire. This could see the lynx released as soon as the autumn, though it may take longer to persuade people in the community that they do not present a threat.
If some conservationists have their way, parts of the UK could be restored to a truly wild state. This "rewilding" would bring back animals and plants that have been lost, and allow them to roam freely.
Scientific studies assessing the habitat potential for lynx suggest that the UK is well suited to their requirements.
For example, it has been reported, Scotland has enough suitable habitat to support a population of at least 400 lynx. "England contains areas of extensive woodland cover with high prey population densities, and low human population densities," said Mr Convery.
"For the farmer there would be a compensation scheme in place for any livestock lost.
"There is no evidence of lynx attacking humans anywhere in the world. I see this very much as a win-win for conservation and broader rural development, and we estimate significant economic benefits for the eventual trial location," Mr Convery was quoted as saying.
Mr Convery said the reintroduction of the Eurasian lynx would prove a natural control on the nation’s overpopulation of deer. “They eat foxes and rabbits too and farmers hate foxes,” he said.
Natural England are effectively unable to comment on the trial application as they would be responsible for granting the licence.
But results of a public survey, carried out with support from the University of Cumbria, have shown overwhelming support for the scheme, with 91 per cent of the 9,000 respondents in favour and 84 per cent believing it should begin within the next 12 months.
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