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Badgers - Culling is not the cure

20/07/2011 14:57:09 uk/wildlife_june_09/badger_rooting_crop_wx Trial vaccination in Gloucestershire

July 2011. The Wildlife Trusts have expressed disappointment at the Government's decision to pursue yet more trials of badger culling, as The Wildlife Trusts does not see culling as the solution to the problem of bovine tuberculosis (bTB).

To press ahead with these pilots ignores the main body of scientific evidence relating to culling, which shows that at best it is ineffective, and at worst can exacerbate the problem.

Significant problem
The Wildlife Trusts acknowledge bTB is a significant problem that causes hardship for many in the farming community but believe there will be no winners from continuing to pursue badger culling as an option.

Paul Wilkinson, Head of Living Landscape for The Wildlife Trusts, said: "This issue demands a scientific and practical approach. The rationale for - and practicality of - any cull of native species needs to be extremely clear and well proven. In this case it is not.

"The announcement of trialling shooting of badgers in pilot areas is still based on the assumption that culling can be a viable solution."

Vaccine required
The Wildlife Trusts strongly support the development of the bTB vaccine for cattle and an oral vaccine for badgers. It welcomes the Government's continued funding for this and urges that there is commitment to ensuring this concludes, and to subsequent wide-scale deployment. The leading conservation organisation sees vaccines as a critical ‘tool in the toolkit' to help break the disease cycle and significantly reduce the levels of infection in cattle. It seeks a clearer timetable and strategy for vaccination to bring us closer the solution so urgently needed.

Paul Wilkinson continued: "There is already an injectable vaccine available for badgers, yet last year the Government cut funding for trialling it. Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust embarked on the first such injectable vaccination trial, of its own initiative, at the end of June. Looking at the deployment of injectable vaccines should help find wider solutions for dealing with this disease."

The Wildlife Trusts are keen for the farming community, conservation organisations and the Government to continue to work together to confront this disease.

Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment

vaccine is the answer

Culling these lovely creatures is NOT the answer. We are supposed to be a civilised society, there are vaccines, so why isnt all efforts being put into a vaccination programme??? Killing them only spreads the problem overa wider area, so what is the point of slaughtering them, and when would the killing stop, probably never as it is not going to be beaten by culling. Money time and a huge effort needs to be put into vaccinating them, what is there to lose, and what a lovely animal to save.

Posted by: susan ewers | 21 Jul 2011 14:31:00

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