The Scotsman

Species matter for our biodiversi­ty

It’s strange that in the draft Scottish Biodiversi­ty Strategy species barely feature at all,

- writes Paul Walton Paul Walton, RSPB Scotland’s Head of Habitats and Species Scotland

The first rule of intelligen­t tinkering is to keep all the pieces, said American conservati­onist and writer Aldo Leopold. immense variety of the living world is astounding, bewilderin­g – but it is not disordered. individual animals, plants, fungi, even microbes, occur in inter-breeding groups that we call species. There is genetic diversity within species, and wider ecological diversity too, but species are fundamenta­l units of life. They interact with one another to build ecosystems and together, these comprise biodiversi­ty. Which is in crisis.

Globally, we are losing biodiversi­ty at a rate faster than ever in human history. scotland is not exempt. out of 240 territorie­s around the world, Scotland ranks 28 th from the bottom in the Biodiversi­tyintactne­ss index, an estimate of overall biodiversi­ty condition. The 2019 State of nature in scotland report showed an average loss of 24 percent in the abundance of well monitored wildlife species since 1994.

Species-based measures of national biodiversi­ty like this one are not just the territory of wildlife charities and pressure groups. the scottish government bases its own National Performanc­e Framework biodiversi­ty indicator on similar, species-based measures. It is strange, therefore, that in the draft Scottish Biodiversi­ty Strategy to 2045, on which consultati­on recently ended, species barely featured.

There has been much constructi­ve discussion around that draft, in Parliament­arycommitt­ees and beyond. publicatio­n of the Strategy, originally due for october, has been postponed pending a new draft in December, with further public consultati­on in early 2023.

Conservati­on organisati­ons have been pressing for three changes: The Strategy must include provisions for a Programme of ecosystem restoratio­n; a programme of species recovery; and specific outcomes and targets against which to measure progress. The Scottish Government are now considerin­g including Ecosystem Restoratio­n and stronger outcomes and targets. But on Species Recovery there is, so far, a frustratin­g response; “we do ecosystems, we don’t do single species”. There is a simple and seductive logic here: ecosystems comprise lots of species, restore ecosystems and lots of species benefit.

But this vastly oversimpli­fies the regenerati­on of the natural environmen­t, overestima­tes understand­ing of species interactio­ns and ecosystems, and overlooks our internatio­nal obligation­s. Humanity is a long way from full understand­ing of ecosystem function, the roles played by component species, and how these change through time.

It would be possible to launch much needed ecosystem restoratio­n programmes for, say, Caledonia n pine woods, yet for these to entirely miss critical actions for species currently struggling in this fragmented habitat – like the twinflower, which needs carefully planned trans location initiative­s to help pollinator­s reach the flowers. we should launch restoratio­n programmes for marine ecosystems–but, alone, these would fail to halt the loss of Scotland’s seabirds, already halved even before the sudden impact of avian influenza. Seabirds have specific needs – like the removal of island invasive predators and in-perpetuity biosecurit­y, and active measures in fishing fleets to reduce entangleme­nt of birds in long lines and nets. A dedicated programme for every single wild species was never the idea. This is about specificac­tions, targeted at specific, threatened species.

We need Programmes of both Ecosystem restoratio­n and species recovery. The detail and prioritisa­tions can a wait future delivery plans. but if these are not both explicitly included, in principle, Scotland’ s Biodiversi­ty Strategy will not do what it must: regenerate Scotland’s nature, maximise its resilthe

ience to intensifyi­ng human threats, and fulfil our internatio­nal responsibi­lities.species matter. if we ignore them, we ignore global obligation­s – and we forget what inspires and sustains our health and culture. A red squirrel, a Scottish primrose and a sea eagle speak more directly, to more people, than any metric or indicator.

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 ?? ?? ↑ A red squirrel feeds in the Trossachs
↑ A red squirrel feeds in the Trossachs

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