Scottish grouse moors to be licensed in attempt to protect birds of prey
Grouse moors across Scotland will be required to hold licences and could face shooting bans as part of radical measures to combat bird of prey persecution passed by MSPs on Thursday.
The Scottish parliament voted for the controls amid intense pressure from conservation scientists and campaigners after decades of illegal attacks on birds of prey by gamekeepers instructed to protect grouse on shooting estates from being eaten.
The wildlife management and muirburn bill includes a ban on snaring of foxes and rabbits in Scotland, the licensing of muirburn – the technique where heather is selectively burned to produce shoots for grouse to eat – and the licensing and tagging of traps used to catch crows, weasels, moles and stoats.
Jim Fairlie, the rural affairs minister and a former hill farmer, said its measures “would protect our wildlife, support our rural businesses and protect our iconic moorlands”. It would “end the stain and the shame of raptor persecution and [allow] animal welfare to be at the forefront of responsible land management”.
He told MSPs grouse moor licensing, recommended in 2019 by an inquiry chaired by Prof Alan Werritty, was needed because the shooting industry had failed, despite repeated warnings, to police itself by “shutting down” the perpetrators known to be persecuting birds of prey. “So now it’s up to us,” he said.
Hours before the vote it emerged that police were investigating the unexplained disappearance of another satellite-tagged hen harrier, a bird of prey routinely targeted for persecution by gamekeepers, on grouse moors in the Angus Glens near Dundee.
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds said the bird, called Shalimar, was the fourth hen harrier to go missing, along with a golden eagle and a white-tailed eagle, in an area “notorious” for persecution. It had been tagged at the National Trust for Scotland’s Mar Lodge estate last year.
Shalimar’s tag suddenly stopped sending out signals on 15 February; a search of the area by Police Scotland, the National Wildlife Crime Unit and RSPB investigations staff had failed to locate either the bird or its tag.
Ian Thomson, RSPB Scotland’s head of investigations, said: “While these provisions have come just too late to prevent Shalimar becoming the latest hen harrier to likely disappear at the hands of criminals, we hope the new legislation will help to consign raptor persecution to the history books in Scotland.”