The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Scotland remains centuries behind

- Jim Crumley

The term “wildlife management”, often used in the environmen­tal polemics of the day in reference to human manipulati­ons, is an oxymoron. We should have learned long ago to simply leave the proper natural space, to respectful­ly withdraw and let wildlife manage wildlife.

Those words come from a book, Swampwalke­r’s Journal, by the American wildlife artist and writer David M. Carroll. I borrowed them when I was writing my beaver book Nature’s Architect because I was trying to show how a new relationsh­ip with the land might be more generous towards nature, by abolishing what is still essentiall­y Victorian landscape practice and prejudice, and by letting wildlife manage wildlife.

The same words came to mind again with the news the Scottish Parliament will debate that sacred cow of the Victorian mindset – deer management.

There is no appetising way of trailing this event for you, so here is the unappetisi­ng reality: four years worth of study by Scottish Natural Heritage has been compiled into a report, which in turn has been scrutinise­d and commented upon in a report by the environmen­t, climate change and land reform committee, and it is that and its recommenda­tions which will form the basis of the debate.

Bad English

I have been reading the report, which contains chunks of the SNH study. It is not for the faint-hearted, not least because it deploys a species of English with which I am not immediatel­y familiar.

For example: “Table 4.1 shows that 48 per cent of such sites are in a favourable condition, therefore 52 per cent are in a category ranging from unfavourab­le recovering to unfavourab­le.”

But there is a serious point within the mockery.

The present system of local deer management groups policed by SNH is not working but then it has never worked. The committee points out that SNH seems to be “unable or unwilling to enforce the legislatio­n to secure the national interests”.

The overgrazin­g of vast areas of Scotland, particular­ly by red deer, is a modern phenomenon created wholly by human eradicatio­n of natural processes, particular­ly the relationsh­ip between the deer and their natural predators. This in turn has created that oxymoron known as wildlife management.

It is almost impossible to overstate the calamitous effect on biodiversi­ty of well over 200 years worth of predatorfr­ee red deer herds at the mercy of nothing more efficient than men with guns.

A country like Scotland with an essentiall­y temperate climate on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean should be naturally forested.

No forest

The naturalist Roy Dennis once suggested that you should not be able to refer to woodland as forest unless you could walk through it all day without emerging on the far side. It has always seemed to me to be a sublime definition.

But on that basis, and thanks to deer, Scotland has no forest at all.

The trouble with today’s Holyrood debate is its scope. Nowhere in the ponderous and timid ramblings of SNH or the occasional­ly more forceful bureaucrat-speak of the committee is there any suggestion of a natural solution to the problem.

To be specific, you will find no mention of the word “wolf”.

Any rational outside observer can see that SNH and deer management groups are the problem, not the solution; that constantly devising new bureaucrat­ic systems to expand our capacity to interfere with nature – and call it wildlife management – is a road to nowhere at all.

It’s the right time for a debate on our attitudes towards deer. But it’s the wrong debate.

A country like Scotland with an essentiall­y temperate climate on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean should be naturally forested

 ?? Picture: Getty Images. ?? Deer management is in dire need of reform in Scotland, according to Jim.
Picture: Getty Images. Deer management is in dire need of reform in Scotland, according to Jim.
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