FARMING SCOTLAND MAGAZINE (July-August 2022)

Page 25

ARTICLE

Bringing back native predators to tackle invasive species crisis Restoring native predator populations could help to keep in check some of the most problematic invasive species around the world, suggests a new study led by Queen’s University Belfast and Cornell University. Invasive species are one of the greatest threats to biodiversity globally and are the main cause for the extinction of vertebrates in the last century, with an estimated cost of at least $162 billion (USD) a year. Native predator populations have been depleted globally, despite being essential for the functioning of the ecosystem and biodiversity. The absence of native predators facilitates the spread of invasive species leading to the extinction of native species throughout the world. The research, published in Global Change Biology, found that restoring native predators could provide a solution to a variety of the most damaging invasive species globally. According to the study, the evolutionary naivety of invasive species to native predators, coupled with a lack of spatial refuges from predation could underpin the abilities of native predators to provide effective control of certain established invasive species. The research team have previously shown how the recovery of the native pine marten in the UK and Ireland has resulted in landscapescale declines of the invasive grey squirrel. Building on this research, the team have now evaluated native predator reintroduction and restoration as a viable nature-based solution to the invasive species crisis. Lead author, Dr Joshua Twining from the School of Biological Sciences at Queen’s University Belfast and the Department of Natural Resources

at Cornell University, says: “In a modern world that is daunted by environmental crisis and ecological collapse, it is more important than ever to realise the potential of restoring native predators to ecosystems from which they have been previously lost. This applies globally but is especially applicable in Britain and Ireland where we have persecuted all our large-bodied predators into extinction with no natural means of recovery.” One example shows how reintroducing the native lynx could help to manage one of the most damaging invasive species to the environment in Europe, the sika deer. Sika deer are considered a pest as they graze on crops and “ring” trees, stripping the bark from the base and causing the tree to die. They are also thought to contribute to the spread of diseases such as bovine and avian TB. The new research provides strong evidence that the lynx could impact sika deer populations in Britain and Ireland. It also shows how the lynx and wolf recovery in Europe could limit raccoon dogs below the threshold for rabies persistence, which remains a huge threat to human and animal health. Further afield, the research examines how the predator Florida panther, one of the first species added to the U.S. endangered species list in 1973, could contribute to control of invasive feral pigs. Feral pigs are widely considered to be the most destructive invasive species in the United States, causing damage to the ecosystem, wrecking crops and hunting animals like birds and amphibians to near extinction. The research shows how reintroducing the Florida panther could effectively provide a nature-based, efficient, and cost-effective solution to limit

Wolf. Courtesy Milo Weiler

Lynx. Courtesy Glen Hoppr

the further spread of feral pigs. Dr Twining concludes: “Our work demonstrates the plausibility of a nature-based approach to the control of certain invasive species around the world. Native predator restoration can provide effective solutions to some of the most damaging of invasive species and thus buffer our natural

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systems against some of the worst of human impacts.” The study, funded by the Natural Environmental Research Council, involved a team of researchers from Queen’s University Belfast, University of Aberdeen, Heriot-Watt, Cornell University and the National University of Ireland, Galway. 25


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Book Shelf

4min
pages 130-132

People

2min
page 129

The Money Man

4min
page 128

Laurencekirk & area

6min
pages 100-101

Finance

3min
pages 126-127

Southern Belle

5min
page 99

Farm Advisory Service

5min
pages 123-124

Scottish Forestry

6min
pages 95-97

Get to know Carole Brunton

1min
page 98

Forestry

2min
page 94

With Linda Melllor

3min
page 93

Life on the Islands

3min
page 92

Capercaillie conservation

3min
page 91

Conservation Matters

3min
page 89

Scottish Land & Estates

3min
page 90

Estate

6min
pages 86-88

Part 4 of Native: Life in a vanishing landscape

7min
pages 84-85

Horses

4min
pages 82-83

Having a Rum Time

5min
pages 76-77

Hot Chefs & Heritage Meats

6min
pages 80-81

Pigs

2min
page 74

Aquaculture

2min
page 75

Crofting

7min
pages 71-73

National Sheep Association

3min
page 70

Sheep

3min
pages 68-69

Kelso Ram Sales

6min
pages 64-67

Scottish Dairy Hub

4min
page 63

Dairy

2min
page 62

The Vet

3min
page 61

Quality Meat Scotland

6min
pages 57-58

Beef

1min
page 55

NFU Scotland

5min
pages 59-60

Telehandlers

12min
pages 47-54

Livestock

3min
page 56

Turriff Show

8min
pages 40-46

Food crisis support

3min
page 39

Pest Control

3min
page 34

Environment

2min
page 36

Farming for the Climate

3min
page 37

Organics

3min
page 35

Rethink your packaging

4min
page 33

Science & Technology

2min
page 38

Rhug Estate Organic Farm Shop in Wales

7min
pages 26-27

Return of native predators?

3min
page 25

Virtual Cheese Award Winner

3min
page 18

Potatoes in Practice

5min
pages 20-21

Opportunities in the Dominican Republic

4min
pages 22-23

James Hutton Institute

3min
page 13

R.S.A.B.I

3min
page 24

Scottish Government

5min
page 19

Say cheese

2min
page 16

Perth Show

6min
pages 14-15
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