The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Angus is blighted by wildlife crime

REPORT: 20% of offences take place in rural Tayside

- MARK MACKAY

Angus and the North East have been uncovered as Scotland’s worst wildlife crime hotspots, with brutal bloodsport­s among the most common offences.

Instances of bird poisonings, hunting with dogs and fish poaching are all recorded in the Scottish Government’s latest annual report.

It reveals that a shocking 20% of all wildlife crime now takes place in rural Tayside, with a number of serious offences on the rise.

The picture is barely any better in the neighbouri­ng police division area, where instances of hare coursing are at a national high.

The worrying findings come despite significan­t efforts to crack down on illegal practices and an improving national picture, with wildlife crime down 8% across Scotland.

Charities and campaigner­s have called for tougher penalties, more successful prosecutio­ns and increased education.

RSPB Scotland’s Duncan Orr-ewing said: “Wildlife crime remains a blight on the internatio­nal reputation of Scotland.”

A staggering 20% of all wildlife crime reported in Scotland now takes place in Tayside, shock new figures show.

The region has become a hotspot for all manner of bloody and illicit offences despite an improving national picture that has seen incidents fall by 8%.

Crimes such as killing of protected birds of prey and hunting with dogs accounted for more than a fifth of the 53 serious wildlife crimes reported in Tayside in 2015/16.

The number of crimes was unmatched, with only the North East (41) and Highlands and Islands (33) coming close.

The Scottish Wildlife Trust has cautioned such offences are likely to remain significan­tly under-reported, such is the difficulty in detecting incidents in remote and rural areas.

It has called for a “zero tolerance” approach to wildlife crime and has demanded tougher penalties and better rates of prosecutio­n.

Of the 90 cases passed to prosecutor­s in 2015/16, just 23 led to prosecutio­ns and only 16 resulted in conviction­s.

Overall, the Scottish Government’s latest annual wildlife crime report shows reported crimes have dropped to 261 from 284 in 2014/15.

Fish poaching remains the most common wildlife crime, though figures show offences have fallen from 101 in 2014/15 to 75 in 2015/16.

Bird persecutio­n was the second biggest offence with 46 crimes recorded, down three from the previous year.

There have, however, been crimes that have seen a significan­t increase, such as reported incidents of hunting with dogs, which have more than doubled in the past 12 months

Figures show there were 44 hunting with dogs offences in 2015/16, up 24 on the previous year, and the highest number over the five-year recording period.

Hare coursing accounted for 38 of the offences and fox hunting for four,

“Wildlife crime comes in many forms.

while deer were the target in two cases.

The Scottish Wildlife Trust’s director of conservati­on, Susan Davies, gave the “small reduction in recorded wildlife crimes” a cautious welcome.

However, she said: “It is likely the overall figures significan­tly underrepre­sent the actual number of crimes taking place, due to the difficulty of detecting incidents that often occur in remote, rural areas of Scotland.

“Wildlife crime comes in many forms, from uprooting plants to baiting badgers.”

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Bird persecutio­n was the second biggest offence, with 46 crimes recorded.
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