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HomePet Industry NewsPet Charities NewsScottish Government's wildlife reforms go 'above and past', says pest controller

Scottish Government’s wildlife reforms go ‘above and past’, says pest controller

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Snares are often used by gamekeepers to protect birds like pheasants, but can lead to slow and painful deaths for trapped animals <i>(Image: League Against Cruel Sports)</i>

Snares are sometimes utilized by gamekeepers to guard birds like pheasants, however can result in sluggish and painful deaths for trapped animals (Image: League Against Cruel Sports)

THE Scottish Government’s wildlife administration reforms go “above and beyond” expectations, in keeping with a pest controller who consulted on the invoice.

The Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill was launched in March this 12 months with the objective of fixing the principles round how folks seize and kill wild animals, and the regulation round muirburn – the seasonal burning of heather to assist land administration.

This would come with banning of snares – skinny wire nooses hooked up to an object that are used to catch animals – and glue traps – sticky boards coated with non-drying glue that small animals like rodents get caught to.

The Scottish Government this week launched a public session on the potential banning of snares and the extension of powers granted to the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SSPCA), which adopted a earlier session on using glue traps.

READ MORE: Scottish tourist attraction named among most popular in the world

Kevin Newell, the founder and proprietor of Humane Wildlife Solutions – the primary pest management firm in Europe to make use of utterly non-lethal strategies to take care of animal infestations – stated that he’s “surprised” plans to ban snares have gotten this far.

He said: “To be honest, I’ve got to admit I was surprised to see the Scottish Government saying they are going to go ahead and ban snares.

“I knew the glue traps ban would come through, but I didn’t think the banning of snares was something getting serious attention.”

Newell was asked by the Scottish Government to consult on the use of glue traps due to his work in interior pest control, where glue traps are primarily used.

But he said that snares are mainly used in hunting to protect game birds from predators, and that their application as a tool for household pest control and land management in farming and the agricultural sector is more limited.

Newell, who is a lifelong animal rights advocate as well as a professional in the pest control industry, said: “Gamekeepers have all sorts of different tools they can use to control wildlife, snares are just a lazy way that they go about it.

“I’ve seen the results of these snares. Non-target species, we’re talking about red squirrels, cats, dogs, deer, all caught. The sad thing is, there is never any action taken against those who illegally catch a species they shouldn’t be catching in the first place.

“If someone snares someone’s cat or dog, nothing ever comes of that.”

He continued: “I didn’t really expect [a ban] to happen in Scotland.

“The shooting industry is a very, very powerful industry that has got a lot of influential people and a lot of money to fight their causes.

“The changes they’re suggesting with the glue traps and snares too go above and beyond anything we had expected.”

READ MORE: Greens fire back after Sir Tom Hunter labels policies ‘insanity’

He noted the recent passage of the Hunting with Dogs (Scotland) Bill in January this year as another example of Scotland passing “progressive” legislation far beyond the expectations of many activists.

The bill also proposes that the SSPCA will be given further powers, allowing them to seize illegal traps even if they have not snared an animal yet.

Newell said the further powers will be useful, but only if they are applied in the right way, saying that the ability to remove snares would only be significant “if followed up by a prosecution of the person setting those snares”.

He added that in England, the RSPCA won’t essentially tackle each case reported to them, and if there was no obligation for the SSPCA to tackle circumstances then it might result in comparable points in Scotland the place some wildlife crimes could be left uninvestigated.

The Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Bill represents an space of laws wherein devolved governments are taking the lead.

The UK Government banned glue traps in its Glue Traps (Offences) Act 2022, however is but to introduce laws to cease using snares.

The Welsh Government, nonetheless, handed its Agriculture (Wales) Bill earlier this 12 months in June, changing into the primary space of the UK to introduce an outright ban on snaring.

If the Scottish invoice was handed, it will depart Northern Ireland and England as the one areas of the UK the place the apply stays authorized, making them outliers in Europe.

The UK is one among solely six nations within the continent the place snaring stays authorized. Belgium, France, Ireland, Spain and Latvia are the one different nations which allow the apply.

READ MORE: Scottish village named among prettiest in the UK

Jake Swindells, director of the Scottish Countryside Alliance, defended using snares in managing wildlife. He stated: “The use of snares is an important tool in wildlife management, which benefits conservation and a range of economic activities from agriculture, shooting, forestry and eco-tourism.

“Given the Scottish Government has already legislated against other practical and effective alternative forms of pest control, this proposal leaves risking those working in the countryside even more unequipped.

“Well-designed snares, used properly, are a humane and effective form of fox control. They are a restraining, rather than killing, device.

“Legislating as suggested will only tie the hands of land managers and conservationists, whilst criminals continue to use illegal snares unaffected by any legislation.”

The public session, which is open to all, started on August 22 and can run for six weeks till October 3, 2023.

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