Shooting Times & Country Magazine

The suite way to protect game

Mapping out a fully integrated approach will pay dividends for a shoot, says Mike Swan

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Let’s start by noting the words ‘predation control’, rather than predator. In managing game and wildlife, how many predators you kill is of no great relevance; rather it is the predation that you prevent that matters. As a consequenc­e, shooting odd random predators is of no great moment.

What is needed is an integrated plan that addresses all the main issues for the species that we wish to protect.

Nesting wild pheasants can lose eggs and chicks to birds such as crows, magpies, rooks, jackdaws and jays, as well as mammals including rats, stoats, weasels, mink and foxes. All these mammals can kill hens on the nest, too, and foxes will take adult birds at any time of year.

Simply picking a single species to control, or even the two or three that you judge to be the most important, is not likely to have that much effect. If you suppress these, other generalist predators are likely to take up much of the slack, resulting in a much more modest impact than you would hope.

Bonanza

The RSPB has found this out at Otmoor in Oxfordshir­e. Having carried out great habitat works to restore the site for breeding waders, especially lapwings, predation became a big issue. Electric fencing to keep out ground predators allowed more lapwings to hatch, but the bonanza of chicks attracted red kites that carried off a significan­t number.

First things first. Before you set off at the predators, what are you trying to achieve? My little shoot is about producing enough wild pheasants for me to organise a few days of rough shooting for seven or eight Guns, without getting tangled up in a release programme.

Other shoots, however, will be running a grouse moor or partridge manor where all the game is wild. Meanwhile, most lowland shoots will be looking to encourage wild production of pheasants and/or redlegs, as well as releasing extras each autumn to guarantee their shooting. In each case, the optimum strategy is slightly different.

For example, those who are releasing game will have an extra late-summer focus on preventing predation of naive poults that have no parents to teach them the ropes.

Sustainabl­e control

“We sorted the foxes when we took over the shoot two years ago.” How often I have heard something like that when I have asked about predation control in my role as a GWCT game management adviser. Such ideas show a fundamenta­l lack of understand­ing of how predation control works.

Nature abhors a vacuum, so whatever the temporary reduction in predator numbers, new colonists will fill the space, usually quite quickly. However, this does not imply failure. The temporary reduction takes the predation pressure off and — if this is at a critical time — it can make the world of difference.

So, the keeper who is ‘at the foxes’ around release time can reduce poult losses significan­tly, making a big difference to the percentage return at the end of the season.

Similarly, someone who takes predation control seriously during the nesting season can dramatical­ly increase the productivi­ty of wild game, through reducing the numbers of eggs and chicks lost, as well as protecting sitting hens. In both cases, this effort will need to be made every year at the critical time.

In most cases, the keeper will find that the numbers of the various predators killed are roughly similar year on year. In my own case, for example, my annual bag of crows has averaged between 20 and 21 for the past 25 years. There have been quite wide variations, but if you look at the bar chart below, I’m sure you will agree that there is no sign of long-term change. What this shows is that my control is entirely sustainabl­e, with the crows bouncing back each year. I am simply taking an annual ‘crop’ of crows to enhance my crop of game, while also helping a significan­t suite of other wildlife, too.

Subsidised predators

Anyone who wonders whether it is acceptable to do this ought to ponder something else, too, and that is subsidised predators. The example of ravens and tortoises in the Mojave Desert of California may seem very distant, but it is very relevant.

Over the past few decades the California­n raven population has grown enormously, ‘subsidised’ by all sorts of foods provided by people, such as roadkill, plus scavenging from landfill sites, sewage works and intensive livestock farming. Ravens have probably always taken the odd young tortoise, but all these extras have caused a massive increase in predation rates across the Mojave, driving a steep population decline.

In the UK, the way we manage our very crowded countrysid­e means we provide a similar support system. This maintains artificial­ly high population­s of foxes, corvids and probably others, such as rats, too. So not only is sustainabl­e control of these species perfectly justified for game management reasons, you might also argue that we have a

“Nature abhors a vacuum — colonists will fill the space”

responsibi­lity to try to redress the balance for other vulnerable wildlife. It’s interestin­g that gamekeeper­s are doing their best to deliver this service at no cost to the public purse, but right now the new open general licences for

“Ask yourself what is at risk and when, then target your efforts accordingl­y”

both England and Wales are making that much more difficult.

In the 1980s, the GWCT carried out a piece of groundbrea­king research into the impact of predation control by a gamekeeper on the partridges of Salisbury Plain. The keeper, Malcolm Brockless, was simply asked to do his best to deal with the legally controllab­le predators using the normal tools — traps, snares, rifle and shotgun.

What this showed was that after three seasons there were four times as many wild greys on the experiment­al area compared with a similar patch 4km away. The treatments were then switched and three years later the autumn count on the new keepered area was a little short of four times that of the original patch. Controlled experiment­s like this are very expensive. You need to fund the keeper, in this case for seven years, then there is all the scientific monitoring. It is hardly surprising that there are not many such studies.

The GWCT’S upland predation experiment of the early 2000s was even more ambitious. It gave similar dramatic results for curlew, lapwing and golden plover, as well as grouse, blackgame and grey partridge.

What these experiment­s show us is that a well-planned predation control programme can be very effective. They also show that you need to address a suite of predators to have much effect. Being hard on foxes alone may well make a lot of difference to survival of released pheasants

 ??  ?? Jays are one of a number of birds known to predate on pheasants’ eggs and chicks
Jays are one of a number of birds known to predate on pheasants’ eggs and chicks
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 ??  ?? Controllin­g foxes around release time can significan­tly reduce the number of poults that are lost
Controllin­g foxes around release time can significan­tly reduce the number of poults that are lost
 ??  ?? A well-planned and well-executed predation control plan will have long-term benefits for gamebirds, including the grey partridge
A well-planned and well-executed predation control plan will have long-term benefits for gamebirds, including the grey partridge
 ??  ?? The American mink is a prolific predator, but GWCT mink rafts can be used to detect their presence
The American mink is a prolific predator, but GWCT mink rafts can be used to detect their presence

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