Yorkshire Post

SEARCH FOR PINE MARTENS

Volunteers are using hidden cameras to search for evidence of the elusive pine marten – only one has seen been alive in Yorkshire in 38 years. Grace Newton reports.

- ■ Email: grace.newton@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Often, when pine martens get a bit of publicity, we have a flurry of sightings. We even had someone claim they’d fed them jam sandwiches in Whitby! There is a lot of confusion with stoats.

IT’S NEARLY three years since a pine marten was last seen alive in Yorkshire.

But a group of dedicated volunteers are not giving up hope of capturing more evidence of these elusive creatures and proving that they still live in our forests.

In the late summer of 2017, social enterprise Nature Spy managed to film three separate clips of a male pine marten in a forest in the North York Moors using hidden cameras.

It was the first live record of a pine marten in Yorkshire since 1982, and the first evidence of any kind since 1993, when a gamekeeper found a skull in a snare trap.

Yet the pine marten caught on camera appears to have moved on, and there have been no further sightings.

James McConnell, a director of North Wales-based Nature Spy, explains that they first began looking for pine martens in the North York Moors in 2014 after years of ‘anecdotal’ sightings that had never been verified.

Camera traps had not been used before and three years later they provided proof, vindicatin­g those managers and volunteers who were convinced pine martens were living in the area.

They then applied to the Heritage Lottery Fund for another three years of grant funding, which they was awarded, and the Forestry Commission joined the project as partners.

There are now over 60 cameras positioned all over the North York Moors National Park. In total, 10 forested areas of the park are being monitored.

Den boxes have also been installed. “We now have a blanket survey and there are cameras everywhere – but it took us years to find a pine marten.

“They are very elusive. We went through thickets in the remote parts of the forest but then filmed it close to one of the main cycle paths.

“It’s tricky to say what could have happened to him. He may have moved on to look for a female to mate with.

“There is some pressure with gamekeeper­s in the area, who trap stoat and weasel.

“He could have died of natural causes.

“They also roam across a massive range in the summer.”

James thinks the pine marten most likely came from an establishe­d population in Kielder Forest, in Northumber­land.

But he says that there are numerous reports of them being seen in the North York Moors submitted by locals.

“There is anecdotal evidence of a remnant population there, and you get occasional reports from the Dales, although we don’t think they have the right level of forest cover there. There are none to the south.

“What we would love is to find some poo so we can extract DNA and find out where he came from.”

Sightings are ranked and verified via an interview system which weeds out glimpses of what are more likely to have been weasels.

A man reported seeing a pine marten in Helmsley at around the same time as the footage was filmed, while an experience­d ferret-keeper claimed to have seen one on a path in Cropton Forest.

“Someone else believed they’d seen a dead body on the road from Pickering to Dalby, but when they returned to the spot it had gone.

“It’s very difficult to verify them. Often, when pine martens get a bit of publicity, we have a flurry of sightings.

“We even had someone who claimed they’d fed them jam sandwiches in Whitby!

“There is a lot of confusion with stoats.”

Pine martens are in decline because of a range of factors.

Habitat loss has been detrimenta­l – they prefer ancient woodland with low-hanging branches that make ideal den sites.

The preservati­on of Scotland’s old Caledonian pine forests has helped in enabling the population north of the border to stabilise at around 4,000.

Pine martens were also persecuted which contribute­d to a reduction in numbers.

They have been both hunted for their fur and trapped to protect game birds.

But they are now a legally protected species.

The English population of pine martens, which are the second rarest carnivorou­s mammal in Britain, was considered extinct until the last decade, when firm evidence of their presence was finally recorded.

Droppings were found at Kidland Forest, Northumber­land, in 2010, and DNA tested for confirmati­on.

They were thought to suggest either a recolonisa­tion by the Scottish population, or Northumber­land pine martens that had not been previously verified.

In 2011 droppings were discovered in Cumbria, and in 2015 the first actual sighting of a pine marten in over a century was filmed in Shropshire.

After the North York Moors sighting in 2017, footage was captured in Northumber­land the following year by the Back From The Brink conservati­on project.

Finding the elusive mammal is no mean feat, as Nature Spy pine marten project officer Ed Snell knows all too well.

He first became involved in the monitoring as a volunteer, and now spends two days a week managing the camera traps. We have a much greater capacity now to respond to sightings,” he says.

“Some of them come from forestry workers, others from farmers and some from the public.

“It can be tricky to identify them as they look similar to stoats, polecats and mink.

“We really need that photograph­ic evidence.

“They thrive in older forests, and persecutio­n has pushed them out. They can be hard to track down.

“We were optimistic that we would eventually film one and it was so exciting when we did after waiting for years.”

Whilst the Yorkshire pine marten programme is focused on obtaining evidence of the animals in the region, it is also looking at ways that pine marten population­s can be supported, through the surveying of habitats and food sources, as well as predator-prey relationsh­ips.

“Part of the project is also to study how pine martens interact with other species,” Ed explains.

“They compete with foxes for the same resources, so habitat suitabilit­y varies from area to area.

“We are working with landowners to engage with them.”

The project also includes working to increase awareness and education of the species, including outlining their importance for local biodiversi­ty, and highlighti­ng the level of legal protection of pine martens in the UK.

■ Visit www.naturespy.org for more informatio­n and also to report suspected sightings in North Yorkshire.

 ??  ?? James McConnell, a director of social enterprise Nature Spy.
James McConnell, a director of social enterprise Nature Spy.
 ?? PICTURE: MATT GIBSON, ADOBE STOCK (TOP) ?? CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Social enterprise Nature Spy managed to film a pine marten in a forest in the North York Moors in 2017.
PICTURE: MATT GIBSON, ADOBE STOCK (TOP) CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Social enterprise Nature Spy managed to film a pine marten in a forest in the North York Moors in 2017.
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