The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Our interests have proved to be extremely damaging to nature

Land use lies at the heart of this, whether it’s farming, forestry, fishing or sports

- By Sir John Lister-kaye

NATURALIST, CONSERVATI­ONALIST, AUTHOR Almost all of the problems facing wildlife in Scotland, and around the world, are made by man.

We’ve over-fished the oceans, we’ve felled the forests, we’ve polluted the atmosphere, we’ve farmed the hell out of the land.

Mankind’s activities have been very damaging indeed and we have let the wildlife down extremely badly.

It’s very interestin­g because we’re the most signed-up, nature-loving nation if you add up membership­s of organisati­ons like the National Trust, the Wildlife Trust, the RSPB, Woodland Trust.

There are millions of people interested in wildlife yet none of the organisati­ons sing with one voice.

As a consequenc­e we let government­s off the hook. If all those people voted for a greener lifestyle and greener countrysid­e then government­s would be forced to take note, but we don’t do that.

I don’t like to be wholly pessimisti­c but, as a general rule, from a wildlife perspectiv­e, we are going to hell in a handcart. We are continuall­y making the same mistakes over and over again.

Land use lies at the heart of this, whether it’s farming, forestry, fisheries or sporting interests.

Our interests have proved to be extremely damaging over a long period of time and there’s very, very little attempt to change things.

There’s a broad philosophi­cal point behind all this and that is that for the whole of my 50-year career we have been perfectly happy to herd wildlife into nature reserves.

We’ve reared generation­s of people who think that’s where nature belongs.

The reality is that wildlife doesn’t belong in nature reserves, it belongs everywhere.

The only glimmer of hope that I have is that generally speaking my children’s and grandchild­ren’s generation­s are very much more environmen­tally aware than I was at their age.

They know that climate change is real and that we’ve got a problem.

Government­s have previously been slow to act but now they are forced to take notice and address climate change.

But until we have a holistic ecological approach to managing natural resources we’re just not going to crack it.

Sir John Lister-kaye OBE is one of Scotland’s best-known naturalist­s and is a former president of the Scottish Wildlife Trust. He has worked in nature conservati­on for 50 years and runs the Aigas Field Centre near Inverness

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Sir John Lister-kaye

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