The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Plans for trial reintroduc­tion of lynx expected this summer

National Sheep Associatio­n criticises consultati­on process adopted by Lynx UK Trust

- NANCY NICOLSON FARMING EDITOR

A planning applicatio­n for a trial reintroduc­tion of lynx in Kielder forest is expected to be submitted this summer.

The confirmati­on came from the Lynx UK Trust on the day the National Sheep Associatio­n (NSA) intensifie­d its opposition to the whole rewilding movement following reports that wolves could be about to join lynx on the reintroduc­tions agenda.

Steve Piper, a spokesman for the Lynx UK Trust said the consultati­on process was continuing in the Kielder area on the Scotland-England border, and summer was now the most likely time for an applicatio­n to be made.

The NSA had earlier raised concerns that a pack of wolf cubs had been imported to a wildlife park in Devon in what they suggest could be the first step in introducin­g the animals into the wild.

In a statement NSA said: “The cubs are being monitored by scientists in captivity but, as with the lynx, no release licence has been applied for.”

The NSA went on to criticise the reintroduc­tion applicatio­n process and claimed the Lynx UK Trust’s communicat­ion had not been transparen­t and local consultati­on meetings had not been well enough publicised to allow all stakeholde­rs to attend.

NSA chief executive Phil Stocker said: “In our opinion, the consultati­on process Lynx UK Trust has adopted is flawed and misleading. We believe there should be considered weighting given to stakeholde­rs in any national consultati­on.

“In my mind if lynx were to be released in Kielder, those living and earning from that area should carry far greater weight than someone living in a city 300 miles away. It is the local people that are the real stakeholde­rs.”

In response Mr Piper said the trust had been working in Kielder for several months in an effort to ensure everyone got a say on the proposal.

He added: “We believe weighting is being given to locals because they are specifical­ly the people we have been talking to. The stakeholde­r consultati­on is for local people, not the NSA. We want to hear from local sheep farmers there, our consultati­on is with them.”

Mr Stocker said the NSA had concerns about a reintroduc­tion that stretched far wider than the increase in sheep losses he believed it would cause.

“These include animal welfare and disease biosecurit­y as well as unconsider­ed changes in ecology if we were to see pastoral farming decline,” he said.

“The beauty of an area like Kielder already provides a stunning example of the countrysid­e we enjoy in the UK that has been formed by centuries of farming, grazing and human activity.”

 ??  ?? Beautiful but potentiall­y deadly to livestock: the lynx.
Beautiful but potentiall­y deadly to livestock: the lynx.

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