MAMMAL MESSAGES - LEARNING FROM THE PAST

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1000 YEARS OF NATURAL HISTORY

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MAMMAL MESSAGES - LEARNING FROM THE PAST PAT MORRIS There have been many significant changes in the British mammal fauna over the past 1000 years, including the extinction of the wolf (Canis lupus), bear (Ursus arctos) and wild boar (Sus scrofa) (Yalden, 1999). Some might argue that we have much to learn from this loss among our more charismatic species. Others might justifiably point out that this country is not big enough to accommodate space-hungry large mammals as well as a burgeoning human population, preoccupied with the safety of its own offspring and livestock. Reduction in our larger carnivores was a result of interspecific competition: they lost. Three centuries of further persecution resulted from the first Queen Elizabeth enacting legislation (‘for ye preservation of grayne’) which included provision for churchwardens to make bounty payments for every head of vermin destroyed, including hedgehogs. Under the second Queen Elizabeth, hedgehogs were given legal protection through the Wildlife and Countryside Act. Perhaps this time something had been learned. Although these historical events and processes are interesting, perhaps the most important changes, and lessons, are to be found among the mammals of the present century. This paper outlines some significant examples. Foremost among these is the case of the otter (Lutra lutra). This was common and widespread throughout Britain even as recently as the 1950s. Otters were shot as pests, raiding eel traps on the Thames a century ago and were still killed at the rate of hundreds per year by the otter hunts well into the 1960s. However, data from the hunts showed a sharp drop in their catch per unit effort (actually ‘finds’ per 100 days hunting) occurring after about 1957 (Chanin & Jefferies, 1978). By the 1980s otters were virtually extinct over much of central and eastern England. It would be easy to blame the hunts for this, but to do so would miss an important lesson. In fact the otter continued to decline after otter hunting ceased in 1975. The real cause of decline among the otter population was the bioaccumulation of organochlorine residues, derived from agricultural pesticides newly introduced to British agriculture. Other top carnivores were also affected, including birds of prey (Newton, 1979). Something had clearly gone wrong at the ecosystem level, the otter just happened to be one of the worst affected species and therefore the most effective indicator of trouble. Fortunately the lesson was learned: organochlorine pesticides were withdrawn from agricultural use. Many species have benefited, not just the otter, and we now have a much better understanding of the dangers posed by such substances. However, one lesson has not perhaps been fully learned, even now. The otter is a relatively long-lived species. Pesticide residues thus have several years in which to accumulate within its tissues, causing sterility long before actual death. The result is that the otters were still around, still found by the hunts and still leaving plenty of evidence to indicate their presence, concealing the time bomb effect of accumulated poisons. But the animals were not reproducing, so that when the older generation died off, a major population

Trans. Suffolk Nat. Soc. 36 (2000)


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MAMMAL MESSAGES - LEARNING FROM THE PAST by Suffolk Naturalists' Society - Issuu