The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Control of deer numbers backed

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A coalition of environmen­tal charities has backed action to control deer numbers, ahead of a Holyrood debate on Tuesday.

Scottish Environmen­t Link, RSPB Scotland, National Trust for Scotland, Ramblers Scotland, Scottish Wildlife Trust, Trees for Life, Woodland Trust Scotland and John Muir Trust have all signed up for increased control.

The group has called for the Scottish Government to move towards a modernised system they say will help deliver national targets on bio-diversity, climate change and woodland expansion.

They have backed the Environmen­t Climate Change and Land Reform (ECCLR) committee report, which criticises the failure of the current system to protect important habitats because too many deer are damaging native woodland.

Maggie Keegan, head of policy at Scottish Wildlife, said the deer population needed managed to protect the environmen­t.

She said: “Overgrazin­g and trampling by deer has had a profound effect on the health, natural functionin­g and connectivi­ty of Scotland’s ecosystems, especially in the uplands.

“We would urge the Scottish Government to take on the ECCLR committee’s recommenda­tions on deer management as there is no time to lose to halt the loss of biodiversi­ty and meet our 2020 targets.”

Alan McDonnell of Trees for Life said: “A more robust deer management system would be a tangible step towards healthier deer, richer natural landscapes for wildlife and stronger rural economies.”

Mike Daniels of John Muir Trust said the deer population was too high. “For more than a century, high deer densities have impoverish­ed the ecology of the Scottish Highlands.”

“Overgrazin­g and trampling has had a profound effect”

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