Environment

Gloucestershire badger cull to be extended

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A licence has been granted to enable badger culling to be continued in the west Gloucestershire pilot area for eight weeks, Natural England has confirmed.

The controversial cull aims to stop the spread of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) by removing at least 70% of the badger population in defined areas. However, during the original six-week licence the licensee fell considerably short of the target, culling just 30% of the badger population.

Natural England said the decision to extend the cull followed guidlines and advice.

The organisation stated, “The advice concludes that extending the cull would help to reduce the spread of bTB in cattle; failure to extend would raise the risk of increasing bTB though perturbation.”

Previously the Badger Trust stated that an extension to the culling period would be “unlawful. The Trust has sent a letter before action to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

The organisation said, “An astonishing eight-week extension to badger culling in Gloucestershire is the latest component in the messy confusion about the “science-led” badger culling pilot trails.

“These have repeatedly claimed to be a maximum of six weeks each but one in Somerset is now running for nine weeks.”

The National Trust has also raised concerns about the cull. The Trust stated that lengthening the badger cull, along with discussions about alternative culling methods, were areas of worry.

Under the original license 708 badgers were culled during a six-week period, which ended last week. The new license specifies that a minimum number of 540 and a maximum number of 940 badgers can be culled in order to deliver disease control benefits.

Further reading:

National Trust raises concerns over badger cull

Badger cull extension would be ‘unlawful’, says charity

Controversial but ‘necessary’ badger cull set to begin in Somerset

Victory for conservation’ as once extinct bumblebee returns to UK

Government biodiversity proposals puts nature ‘up for sale’, say campaigners

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