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Otter recovery has reached every UK county – Except Kent

18/10/2010 23:46:54
uk/uk_2010/EA_Otter

The otter population has recovered thanks to a ban on harmful pesticides put in place in the 1970s and legal protection given to otters, making it an offence to intentionally kill or harm the animal.

Otters back from the brink of extinction
October 2010. The faint splash of an otter gently entering a river could have been a sound lost to England forever, but the iconic mammal has fought its way back from the brink of extinction, a new report from the UK's Environment Agency can reveal.

Otters, which almost disappeared from England in the 1970s due to the toxic effects of pesticides, are now found in every region of England, and in every county except Kent.

Healthy populations
In south west England and along the River Wye, otter populations have reached their maximum capacity. There are also healthy populations in Northumbria, Cumbria, Wessex and the Upper Severn. The Environment Agency has predicted that the species will now fully recover across England in less than 20 years.

Water quality improvement
The otter population has recovered thanks to a ban on harmful pesticides put in place in the 1970s and legal protection given to otters, making it an offence to intentionally kill or harm the animal. They have also been helped by a significant improvement in water quality over the past 20 years, bringing fish back to rivers that were once grossly polluted.

Paul Raven, Head of Conservation and Ecology at the Environment Agency said: "The otter is at the top of the food chain, and as such is an important indicator of the health English rivers. The recovery of otters from near-extinction shows how far we've come in controlling pollution and improving water quality. Rivers in England are the healthiest for over 20 years, and otters, salmon and other wildlife are returning to many rivers for the first time since the industrial revolution. But there is still work to be done, and we will continue to work with farmers, businesses and water companies to reduce pollution and improve water quality even further, to ensure the full recovery of the otter across the country."

The fifth otter survey of England examined 3,327 river sites across the country between July 2009 and March 2010. The survey showed that:

otter survey results

  • The number of sites with evidence of otter life has increased tenfold in 30 years, with positive site records increasing from 5.8 per cent in 1977-79 to 58.8 per cent in 2009-10. 
  • Since the last survey in 2002, positive site records have increased from 36 to 58 per cent.
  • The pattern of recovery differs at a regional scale, with East Anglia and the River Thames and its tributaries showing the biggest increase in positive signs since 2000-02. 
  • The otter's recovery has already exceeded the 2015 targets set in the revised Biodiversity Action Plan.

 


  • Recovery has been slowest in the south east, with Kent being the only county in England where no otters have yet been recorded. Otter recovery is spreading towards the south east from traditional strongholds in the north and south west, and it is predicted that the population will spread to Kent within the next ten years. 
  • In the south west and the River Wye catchment otter populations have probably reached maximum capacity, with those in Northumbria, Cumbria, Wessex and the upper Severn close to that.
  • A copy of the report summary is available on the Environment Agency website

 

Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment

Otter inriver Cart Glasgow/Paisley

Spotted a large Otter in teh riover Cart this morning betwween Crookston Glasgow and Hawkshead Paisley.

I have been walking along this strectch of teh river regualry for thelast 8 years and this is the first tiem I ahve seen an Otter here

Posted by: alan foster | 26 Oct 2010 09:24:15

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