Yorkshire Post

Repercussi­ons for moor from grouse shooting ban

- Adrian Blackmore Adrian Blackmore is director of shooting at the Countrysid­e Alliance.

THE RECENT vote by members of the Labour Group of Bradford Metropolit­an District Council to not renew the shooting lease on Ilkley Moor has been met with disbelief and disappoint­ment by many, flying as it does in the face of reasonable logic.

As its owner, Bradford Council has both a national and internatio­nal responsibi­lity to conserve the moor, and while councillor­s are known to have been subjected to an animal rights campaign, with the lobby group Ban Bloodsport­s on Ilkley Moor at its forefront, the Countrysid­e Alliance tried hard to engage with the Labour Group so that when voting, their decisions could be based on facts; not on unsubstant­iated accusation­s, or through online campaignin­g which is unrepresen­tative of public opinion as a whole.

Ilkley Moor is the last remaining council-owned moor on which grouse shooting and its associated management has taken place. The shooting lease has been held by the Bingley Moor Partnershi­p (BMP) since 2008, and in the council’s own 2016-2026 Management Plan for Ilkley Moor, the BMP is listed as being one of the key partners that were vital to the ongoing success of that plan. That appears to have been a short-lived aspiration.

When the BMP took on the shooting lease in 2008, only 25 per cent of Ilkley Moor was heather-dominant, and over the last ten years this has doubled. This is a habitat of considerab­le importance and we have a duty to protect it.

It is also the only habitat on which red grouse, a totally wild species unique to the United Kingdom, is found, and although they had virtually disappeare­d from Ilkley Moor when the BMP took over its management, the population has now been restored. As a result, it is no coincidenc­e that 70 per cent of England’s upland Sites of Special Scientific Interest are managed grouse moors, and over 40 per cent are also designated as Special Protection Areas for rare birds and Special Areas of Conservati­on for rare vegetation, the highest designatio­ns under European nature directives. Ilkley Moor carries all three designatio­ns.

The management of heather is vital not just for the benefit of grouse, but for many other ground nesting birds that share that habitat. The RSPB considers the curlew to be the species of highest conservati­on priority in the UK, and research has shown that their densities can be up to five times greater on moors managed for grouse shooting, compared to those that are not. Independen­t bird counts carried out over the last eight years have shown that many threatened species of ground nesting birds have multiplied in number on Ilkley Moor since the BMP took on the management, including curlew.

The income from grouse shooting has been used by the BMP to fund this management. It has paid for, and housed, a full-time employee on site to look after the Moor, dealing with vandalism, wildfires and anti-social behaviour.

In addition, it has employed some 40 people on a casual basis on each of the eight shoot days that it has held each year, the Partnershi­p having paid the council £12,000 each year to do so. It had offered to increase this to £16,000 annually, so £2,000 for each shoot day, which is income that will now be lost to the public purse. It will also now be taxpayers that have to fund the moor’s significan­t management costs that had previously been covered by the BMP.

In reaching its decision, it is unfortunat­e that Bradford Council did not follow the example of the National Trust, which only last week announced it had selected three new shooting tenants in the Peak District to work as partners in order to help deliver its High Peak Moors Vision over the next five years. The National Trust had also been subjected to anti-shooting campaign by animal rights activists, but chose to side with evidence and common sense and made this decision based on what it thinks is best for nature, having recognised the considerab­le environmen­tal, economic and social benefits of grouse shooting and its associated management.

The High Peak is a managed landscape and its new tenants have committed to work with the National Trust to boost wildlife and enhance the landscape that draws millions of tourists every year. This is exactly what the BMP had been committed to do with Bradford Council, in order to help further enhance the flora and fauna on the 1,500 acres of Ilkley Moor over which it has held the shooting lease for the last ten years.

The council’s decision to end that partnershi­p raises serious concerns for the future of Ilkley Moor, and it needs to be held accountabl­e. There is a need for it to publicly commit to maintainin­g the current levels of funding for the conservati­on and management of the moor, and to commit to the rigorous monitoring of the wildlife on the moor.

The change in management can be expected to have an impact on many species, not least the curlew, and it will need to take responsibi­lity for any declines.

The council’s decision to end the partnershi­p with the Bingley Moor Partnershi­p raises serious concerns for the future of Ilkley Moor, and it needs to be held accountabl­e.

 ?? PICTURE: PA. ?? CONTROVERS­IAL: The decision to ban grouse shooting on Ilkley Moor will mean the costs of managing the moor will fall on taxpayers, the Countrysid­e Alliance claims.
PICTURE: PA. CONTROVERS­IAL: The decision to ban grouse shooting on Ilkley Moor will mean the costs of managing the moor will fall on taxpayers, the Countrysid­e Alliance claims.
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