The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Going wild: Action call as deer numbers surge

Pleas for urgent and enforced deer culling to protect wilderness

- By Richard Baynes news@sundaypost.com

Pressure is growing on the Scottish Government to force Highland estates to cut deer numbers as conservati­onists and landowners appeal for action over the swelling herd.

More than a year after the government agreed a major shake- up of how deer are controlled in Scotland, the John Muir Trust ( JMT ) conservati­on charity said action was n ow needed to deal with the problem.

The Trust wants compulsory, legally enforceabl­e deer- cull targets for all estates – which currently agree voluntary targets for deer numbers with government wildlife agency

Naturescot – to ensure trees, vegetation and peatlands are not wrecked by the deer herds.

At the same time, a group of estates in the south- east Highlands has taken the unpreceden­ted step of asking the government to step in with the threat of compulsory culls to deal with neighbours who they say are “not pulling their weight” in the battle to control the deer herd.

It follows a warning from the government’ s own agencies that the risk of traffic collisions with deer have climbed by a fifth partly due to the increase in deer numbers over recent decades.

The JMT has led a campaign to drasticall­y cut deer numbers, saying Scotland’s 400,000- odd red deer – mainly in the Highlands – plus 600,000 deer of other species, have no natural predators and are wrecking woodland and other habitats.

Naturescot says the number of deer has grown by 50% since 1972, while some conservati­onists say the number of deer in the Highlands should be just a fraction of the current figure.

Top of the agenda for the JMT is the most controvers­ial of more than 90 recommenda­tions made two years ago by a special working group of deer experts set up by the Scottish Government to look at the deer problem, nearly all of which were agreed by the government last March. This was that the government should set up a “planned cull approval system” to impose cull targets on all landowners.

The Trust’s head of policy and land management,

Mike Daniels, said this week: “It is widely accepted that unsustaina­bly high deer numbers are seriously impeding Scotland’s ability to deliver its natural climate and biodiversi­ty targets.

“The Scottish Government and its agencies clearly acknowledg­e and understand this and have indicated the need for change. What we are all urgently waiting for is action on the ground to ensure all land managers deliver sustainabl­e deer management that benefits nature, the climate and local communitie­s. The era of private landowners deciding how many deer they want purely for their sport must end.”

Many landowners fear such moves could make deer management impossible. They say if they are told to keep deer numbers too low, they cannot attract stalking clients, who pay profession­al stalkers’ wages.

But a long-standing r ow over deer in the south-east Highlands boiled over when a group of landowners made a formal request for government help in compelling other estates in the area to cut deer herds, saying “a minority refuse to engage and deliver their responsibi­lities”.

The South Grampian Deer Management Group ( SGDMG) area includes the Caenlochan Special Area of Conservati­on with its species-rich grasslands, blanket bog, alpine and other important habitats, which Naturescot says is being damaged by overgrazin­g.

It is this damage the SGDMG has been fighting to end, but some estates in the area are not culling enough deer to stop it being in “unfavourab­le condition”. The group has refused to name the estates it believes are failing.

It has now made a formal request for help from government wildlife agency Nature S cot, asking for what is known as Section 7 agreements across most of the SGDMG area. Under these, land managers agree specific targets and actions to cut deer problems.

Any estates in the area that refuse to make agreements, or fail to keep to them, face much more draconian Section 8 action, which has to be signed off by the First Minister. That would mean they would be told what to cull and Nature S cot would bring in hired guns to shoot the deer if they fail to.

The group chairman, Doug Mcadam, said that while deer numbers have fallen, there was still a big problem. “The majority of estates in our group area [ are] finally losing patience with those that will not pull their weight and work collaborat­ively to achieve common deer management goals,” he said.

“Put simply, the majority are tired of bearing the burden because a minority refuse to engage and deliver their responsibi­lities. National priorities have changed, and deer managers now have to consider the public interest more than ever in addition to their own estate objectives.”

Argyll estate owner Tom Turn bull, chairman of Scotland’s Associatio­n of Deer Management, gave his backing to the SGDMG move,

saying: “The formal request from the DMG for a five- year Section 7 agreement is a significan­t step that demonstrat­es the commitment of the local deer managers to continue reducing deer numbers to sustainabl­e levels whilst improving and restoring … important habitats.”

The SGDMG area includes Bachnagair­n, part of the royal estate centred on Balmoral, but there is no suggestion that estate has failed to make agreed culls.

Over the past few weeks Scottish Greens co- leader and minister for biodiversi­ty Lorna Slater has been meeting conservati­on groups, including the JMT, and deer estate managers in an effort to sort out the deer problem.

The Scottish Government said wild deer population­s have been steadily increasing, with a “devastatin­g impact on the environmen­t”. It added: “We have committed to fully modernise deer management, implementi­ng the recommenda­tions of the Deer Working Group. As part of this work we will update existing legislatio­n and take forward non- legislativ­e actions to improve current operating practices.”

Last month Naturescot said there might be as many as 9,000 collisions between deer and vehicles a year, with up to 100 people injured.

The most up-to-date figures are for the period 2016 to 2018, which show a total of 5,550 “deer-vehicle collisions”, a 20% increase compared to the previous three- year period. Figures for 2019 to 2021 will be available in July.

The largest number of collisions occur in northern parts of Scotland, although the biggest increase is in the Central Belt. Naturescot said the increase in both deer numbers and traffic was behind the rise.

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 ?? ?? A 1893 engraving shows Prince Albert deer stalking while at Balmoral
A 1893 engraving shows Prince Albert deer stalking while at Balmoral
 ?? Picture Steve Cox ?? A tourist takes a selfie with a red deer in a carpark near Glencoe
Picture Steve Cox A tourist takes a selfie with a red deer in a carpark near Glencoe
 ?? ?? Estate owner Tom Turnbull
Estate owner Tom Turnbull

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