Deer are not the problem. We are the problem.
That deer numbers in the Scottish hills are far too high to
allow forest regeneration has been known for many decades. The extermination of
predators followed by the rise of deer stalking as a leisure pursuit of the
wealthy are the causes. Stalking estates require large numbers of deer for
their clients. With no predators other than humans it’s up to us to control the
deer population. And we’ve failed, with numbers of red deer rising steadily
from an estimated 150,000 in 1959 to 400,000 today. In 1955 in his West Highland Survey the great
naturalist Frank Fraser Darling, then official adviser to the Deer Commission,
wrote that the optimum number might be 64,000. In the same book he also wrote “The
bald unpalatable fact is emphasized that the Highlands and Islands are largely
a devastated terrain, and that any policy which ignores this fact cannot hope
to achieve rehabilitation.”
Overgrazing
by red deer is one of the main causes, perhaps the main cause, of this.
Deer didn’t destroy the forests. We did that. But deer are
preventing their return because of their numbers. This is no fault of the deer.
Red deer are magnificent animals. I love seeing them. But I don’t love seeing
the devasted land they create. In Scotland red deer are creatures of the open
hills and empty glens, but only because the forests where they would naturally
live have gone. A balance is needed. Deer and forests. Deer in forests. There’s
currently only one way to achieve this, sadly. Kill more deer. Fencing out deer
can let some areas regenerate but not that many. Squeezing the deer into
smaller and smaller areas that become increasingly damaged cannot be the
answer. Fences are expensive, unsightly, a barrier to access, and damaging to
wildlife and habitats. Reintroducing wolves would be the ideal solution but I
can’t see this happening for many years. In the meantime it’s up to us. I strongly
dislike the idea of shooting deer but I can see no other answer.
This issue has come to the fore now because of a report,
Managing
Deer for Climate, Communities and Conservation, compiled by eighteen
conservation and recreation organisations* and published by Scottish
Environment LINK that calls for major changes to the way deer are managed. The
report gives ten reasons why change is needed. Apart from more trees these
include healthier peatlands (trampling and grazing dry the peat), more rural
jobs (landowning environmental NGOs employ five times more FTE staff per square
kilometre than the commercial deer stalking estate), fewer ticks (it’s highly
likely the rise in tick numbers is connected to the rise in deer numbers), and
a cut in greenhouse gases (a 20 per cent reduction in deer numbers would save
the carbon equivalent of around 15 million car miles on Scotland’s roads each
year).
*Badenoch & Strathspey Conservation Group, Butterfly
Conservation Scotland, Cairngorms Campaign, Froglife, John Muir Trust, National
Trust for Scotland, Nourish Scotland, Ramblers Scotland, RSPB Scotland,
Scottish Badgers, Scottish Raptor Study Group, Scottish Wild Land Group,
Scottish Wildlife Trust, Trees for Life, Woodland Trust Scotland. Plus support
from non Link members Forest Policy Group, North Harris Trust, Reforesting
Scotland.
I’m a member of seven of these groups, and a Trustee of the
John Muir Trust.