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December 30, 2024 60 mins

The calendar year is coming to an end. Since the episode's scheduled date falls on the last day of the year, I feel it's fitting to publish a 2024 recap episode featuring the most interesting clips from all the episodes published this year - or rather, last year (2024).

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
This is Conservation and Science podcast, where we take a deep diveinto topics of ecology, conservation and human wildlife interactions.
And this is the recap of all the episodes from 2024.
Enjoy!
Quite a big number.
Wolves will be called this year,but this is where the agreement comes together.

(00:21):
Of course, the Nature Conservancy, conservationistsand yeah, the wolf lover me is not.
I'm not happy about the wolves that are hunted,but but I see that this is the price.
Everybody must get something.
Otherwise it goes poaching goes on the ground.

(00:43):
And people get will be very hateful.
And, you know, you have to give everybody somethingbecause the hatred really is born in the moment.
You lose your sheep or animals,and you don't know if you're going to get the compensation.
And if it's like Estonia, then you get it in one year.

(01:03):
Let's say you lose your sheep in January.So the payment is next January.
And if you are Latvian then you get nothing.
They have no compensation.
So and we see that that there also the hatred is building up.
And of course sometimes you get the compensation,very generous compensation, but still you have hatred
because it's rooted deep, three layers deep because, you know,you don't want to deal with it and why it's so deep.

(01:34):
It's because,
the benefits
of having a apex predator,we all love it, but the cost goes on very little, group of people.
So they, like, feel they pay for our, wolf, love.
And that's true.

(01:55):
So you can't, really achieve what you want to achieve.
Namely, that everybody respects the wolf.
No, they will hate the wolf in their heart.
And if you don't allow to hunt the wolf,then it goes into poaching and and then you lose maybe the whole pack.

(02:18):
But if you give you all some of the.
Yeah.
Permissions to, Yeah, hunt some of the wolves, then you perhaps.
Yeah. Keep the pack but lose some of the wolves.
There is some really, really interesting stuff happening in Sweden
at the moment where they've got the dogs to tell them what orderthe dog is actually tracking.

(02:40):
So they're doing, lynx, wolf and bear.
And whenever the dog is on the track, the dog, they make the dogwait and get the dog
to show them which, order they're actually tracking at that timeand say what predator is in the area type thing.
So it is possible for the dog to specifically tell you, oh, darn,that burrow is puffin down.

(03:04):
This burrow is like shearwater, but,we haven't done it. But here it sounds like it might take a crack.
So if you have the dog in the cage, like one bark, two barkslike I was it.
No. So we treat it a passive indication.
So for my dogs, I like, a sit down and stare.
So they'll ask, for example, at the burrows.They will sit and stare down the burrow.

(03:25):
And then for the pointer, she naturally points outwhatever it is that she's found.
So she just throws a freeze and the nose is pointing at the odor.
Which will be good for the quarter.
Next, I as soon as she hits the the odor of cartoonist.
I don't want her to move so that she is ashe is a statue as she comes across it.

(03:46):
So it's type of like dog sits, dog lies down or whatever.
And you know, it can it can tell like, wow, this is this is reallythis is really fascinating.
It was a little cuckoo.
So okay, so other question is like
you mentioned that people in Sweden doing something like thatis, is that it's using dogs for conservation, like, discipline.

(04:07):
Let's say that this growing in the conservation worldor is it like super niche or is it's popular like where where is it?
It's it's definitely growing.
So some countries it's like mainstream.
They've been using dogs almost for centuries.
Like New Zealand for example.

(04:28):
They were using dogs in like 1890 to like find to like.
This is not a new thing for them at all.
And in America they've been using dogs will also evenand actually in the UK we were using dogs to help count rice
setting and pointing dogs for a long time.
It's just that they weren't,
you know, we didn't really class them as conservation detection dogswho weren't trained in that kind of detection element.

(04:53):
But in the past ten years, I think it has grown massively here,and it is continuing to grow.
And the number of projects now that are coming to usand asking are, as a dog, useful has grown absolutely massively.
Yeah.
And the title of the paper is Anthropogenic Food SubsidiesHinder the Ecological Role of Wolves.

(05:14):
Insightsfrom conservation of apex predators in human modified landscapes.
And essentially, what that paper describesis that the region of Italy called Abruzzo,
more than half of diet of wolves is livestock, arguably solid livestock,not like the predation.
But the point is that if we think we bringing back wolves,and so for them to keep the wild ungulates herd

(05:40):
healthy and regulate the numbers,then this is their intended ecological functions.
And if they have this anthropogenic subsidies,then obviously they're not fulfilling that function.
So that is another very important consideration.
Before answering a question whether I'm for reintroductionsor against reintroduction, clearly restoration would be a better term.

(06:06):
Some preferred term reestablishment.
I read the book by great conservationistRoy Dennis, who was part of a incredible number of, reintroductions,
and he he described them all in the book.
And the title of that book is Restoring the Wild.
You see what I mean?
It's not reintroducing the wild. It's restoring the wild. But.

(06:30):
Well, the reintroduction is, term that is most often used.
So I guess we stuck with it. Yeah, I think that's a fair point.
Predation is often, underestimated, in terms of impacton, on a lot of, in particular ground nesting birds.
And I think that the the point is that with

(06:52):
increasing agricultural
intensification, for example, on, on grasslands,the hay making has largely been replaced by silage.
So the nutrient cycling is much faster.
There is more food, there is more earthworms, there is more rodents.
Think about the vole densities in grasslands.
So there is simply a much bigger carrying capacityfor these, small predators than what used to be the case historically.

(07:17):
And all these foxes and stoats and weasels,and it is spread through the countryside, and it's just
the sheer number of predatorsthat seems to be, in some cases, at least, the main driver for declines.
And if I may give a few examples, the black got which,
despite all the conservation efforts, you see thatpredator predation is still one of the main causes of decline.

(07:41):
Our species has disappeared over large parts of Europe.
Curlew in Ireland. It's probably also, predation related.
Some countries might have bigger areasthat are either suitable or should be protected,
and therefore they have, you know, a larger burden which we like, even,

(08:02):
you know, considering nature restoration or protectionin the, in the category of and it's like, oh man, that's not good.
But that, that is the real problem, right. Like how youhow are you going to share, share this,
burden, you know, say.
Yeah.
Which, which makes me think maybe we should replace the word burdenby something more positive.

(08:22):
You're right.
Yes. Yes, absolutely.
I'll take that idea.
Okay. Thank you, thank you.
I'll take a credit if it's changed. I'll take good credit.I think you deserve it.
All the definitions really mean the same thing.
And that I.
You know, I like to pare down to giving nature the spaceand the time, crucially, to dictate its own, ecological trajectories.

(08:49):
And that means ecological succession, without interfering too much.
And, yes, there is this, this problem of a definition,you know, a globally unifying, generally accepted definition.
And, you know, that's why,
in Cumbria at, University of Cumbria myself and,

(09:14):
you know, a group colleagues were asked by the IUCN,the International Union for the Conservation of Nature,
to try to bottom this out and, come up with a unifying definition,which, you know, exactly what we've done.
We started work in 2017,
big survey of,

(09:35):
of, people.
We identified, through a soft snowball exerciseas being key informants, early adopters, innovators in the field,
and then, subsequent surveys of, rewilding, organizationsto, to to identify a set of guiding principles and definition.

(09:57):
And then that's what we've done, you know, so, yeah,we're hoping that's useful.
And it has been picked up by various organizations and individualsas being, you know, as near as dumb, that fall definition.
I think that the part of that was like you said,that even the hunting can mean different things to different people.
Absolutely.
But then the term is around for so longthat most people intuitively know what that is.

(10:24):
While rewilding is fairly new, right?
It's like when it was first like in the 80s, I think that was that.
Yeah, people started talking about in the 80s.
It first appeared in print in 1990and Newsweek magazine article by Genesis. But,
and since then, you know, it's it's it's been it's, you know, it,

(10:45):
it sort of started, been used mainly in the USA and North,you know, North America, USA, Canada,
it's crossed the Atlantic.
It's become something different on this side of the Atlantic,I would say in a sort of the how, how what was the difference?
I'm curious.
This is very interesting because that never come up right?
Because originally it was like a wilderness recovery.

(11:07):
Exactly.
It's my head is is way less contentious.
If you like, then rewild.And then so what was the change when it crossed the Atlantic?
You know, the, the in North America,the impetus was really about connecting up remaining wilderness areas.
In my, my mid 20s, I got connected with Tom Brown, the tracker outand in his work, and I got to spend time with him in some places. And,

(11:39):
and, you know, he's one of the living treasuresthat we still have as far
as a direct connection to the living,a patchy beard of the southwest, the United States and,
and their traditional techniques and tactics and lifestyle.
So not only is he tracker and survivalist and able to, you know,

(12:02):
teach people these things, but they he also talked about their,philosophy and spiritual habits and the importance of meditation and,
and so
from there, that that's what triggered me into being interestedin structuring some, meditation into my life, in my lifestyle.

(12:23):
And I just wanted one, like, one thing that I want to say for,
for people who are listening to this, that meditation is not,
you know, there's a lot of people who will say, like, oh,some kind of woowoo meditation. What are you doing?
And there is a lot of like a huge body of peer reviewed neuroscienceabout the benefits of meditation.

(12:48):
There are very similar use studies done at at Princeton, at Berkeley,at all the top universities
who are just it's just undeniably pointing to benefits of meditation,various types of meditations for your mental
health, for the focus, for how your hormonal system works,how your endocrine system works, how.

(13:14):
And, I've been on a lot of grouse moors and non grouse moors.
If you want to see almost like a zoo of wildlife,go to a good managed grouse moor.
You will not only see the grouse, but you will see songbirds.
You will see all these non-game birds
and you'll see all these red listed waders, you know, oystercatchers,curlews, all that stuff and large numbers there.

(13:39):
And it makes sensebecause the habitat's been manipulated or enhanced in order to in a way
that propagates their ability to survive on the land.
And they're not stupid, you know, I mean,
if you got a little quarter or half acre section that's been burnedand you got new growth coming up there from the heather,
all of a sudden you're in a scenario where there's food for themand there's an open area there

(14:00):
where they can kind of keep an eye out for predators. But predatorsguess what?
Wherever you have lots of game animals or lots of food, in this case,walking McDonald's all over the place, you're going to have lots of,
predators, in this case, the avian predators,which are protected by law, just like you're in the United States.
You know, you've got the golden eagles and kites and and buzzardsand I mean, there's just there's a I mean, you go out on a grouse moor

(14:24):
and you might see half a dozen species, different species,of avian raptors, and you're going to see them in pretty good numbers.
Whereas if you go to other placesthat don't have that type of management on land.
Yeah, you might see some here and there,but it's it's the difference between going to a proverbial zoo,
and just being out someplace, you know, next to town, somewherein a, in a

(14:48):
in a cow field, which the other thing is, is a lot of people talkabout biodiversity and this, this whole concept of biodiversity loss
and that there's a crises going on in the Highlandsbecause these grouse moors are, are, that are diverse.
They don't have the diversity that some people think they should have.
You go up to one of those, go up there with a gamekeeperand a good ecologist, a good scientist or a biologist

(15:14):
with a pair of binoculars, and they will show youthings that you never see, because I don't think humans take the time
to really sit there and watch this stuff.
And, there's a great number of, of, of animals,like I said, up in that area and that area has evolved to be like that.
It's not a product.
You know, on the outside, it looks like we've kind of package itby human hands, by the, the muirburn, which is,

(15:38):
the low intensity burning in small areas.
And so you get this patchwork mosaic of, of different growth and, and,and it's and, you know, it's it's different to me.
When I first saw it, I was like, wow, this is kind of cool. Look.
And of course, when the in an Augustwhen the heather all turns and blooms and purple
and you get all this stuff out there, I don't meanthe place is is absolutely off the hook. Gorgeous.

(16:00):
But this land has evolved over thousands and thousands of years.
So again, using science as our main common denominator, if we go back9000 years ago, Scotland in the Highlands was covered under glacial ice.
There wasn't any trees, there wasn't any heather,there wasn't any deer, there wasn't any humans.

(16:20):
When the seasons started,I was at the sea every weekend, and that lasted for 3 or 4 years.
As soon as the season started, lateJuly early August, running till the late October early November.
As soon as the reports showed up that, sharks are around.

(16:41):
Hell, some of those reports were from the boats I was on.
I was outthat was doing it, and every shark that we caught was measured,
was, measured the full lengthtill the tip of the tail, fork length to the fork of the tail and girth.
These measurements meant

(17:01):
were meant to facilitate establishing the weight of a shark,because you cannot wave shark on the boats that it's rocking.
And the sharks were tagged with a tag number and released.
And this tagging program
is run by, fishery board in Ireland, and it's called charts.
We have a podcast, about this program.

(17:23):
And this is gold standard program for tagging sharks and rays and plasmabreeding species.
Okay. It is the fed.
The data is available to scientists.A lot of research was done based on that data.
Great program.
You know I would never claim shark conservation.
I would never say that I'm a shark conservationistor that I'm doing shark conservation work.

(17:48):
I just did, I didn't,I was just doing whatever I was doing. I was shark fishing.
You see the you see the similarities.
No shark was better off by being caught, handled and tagged similarly.
Like no bird is better off, but being caught, handled and ringed.

(18:11):
Maybe the thing over here is that wedon't, had that much sort of offshore.
We are not opposite sides.
In general, we have a common of course, we have,
different angles to do things.
And, and of course, we have, different perspectives, to, bird questions.

(18:35):
But for example, in water falling, we have a perfect similar waythat that we work together can work together for the waterfall.
And since Finland is an important area for bird production,
it is vital that in in a small countrywith, with many, many, many lakes,

(18:58):
we combine our it's a lot and and work for the waterfall.
And what comes to the Sitka project itself.
It's a we are only a small part of a much larger project.
And, of course there are parts in the bigger project.
There are some for the wildlife agency and, parks and forestsworking on that, on that, state owned land.

(19:24):
And so there's a little, little piecefor everyone working in the sector.
And also we got it was kind of an we were honored that wewe were given this small, small project of ours to run.
And since we're talking about voluntary things to, to work with it,
I suppose it was very natural only to ask for the,for the kind of third sector associations to do that work.

(19:52):
During the study, they had, I colleagues in this project,some of the coauthors had G.P.S.
colors that to lions in its properties.
Is that all of a conservancy in Kenya and,
I think we had six collared animals, each in a different pride.
So that's about 66 lions.

(20:14):
And you can tell when lions are either very inactiveor if they've killed something
based on the pattern in those GPS locationsand how they show up on your computer.
So then people would go out and investigate what we call a, GPS cluster,a cluster of points from the GPS collar
and see what you see, what the lion was doing in that area.

(20:36):
And that's where we discovered what they were feeding onand the type of habitat that they're feeding on in these in the study.
So we noticed that, yeah, they definitely like to kill zebra.
That's their preferred prey. So lie about 60% of the things lions
kill in the system were zebra.

(20:56):
And most zebra were killed by lions.
That's how you die if you're a zebra 90% of the time.
So we got a sense of what lions were eating and then where.
So when?
Whenever they made a kill site,we measured visibility in that area and we discovered that, yeah, we.
Which is pretty common knowledge that lions use cover to,to conceal themselves as they attack and kill prey.

(21:19):
Like most cats. Right. Their ambush.
Absolutely. Yeah.
So then we have this observationthat lions like cover to kill things, but covers declining.
So what does that mean? And that's where this long term data come in.
And we've noticed that over timelions are the proportion of zebra in the lions diet has been declining.

(21:40):
And it's being made up by buffalo by buffalowhich is a huge animal to attack.
Right.
These are big scary beasts.
And yeah. So lions have made a switch and there's some reason for that.
And we don't see a relationship between cover or visibilityand, and buffalo kills.

(22:02):
So whatever makes a buffalo vulnerable to being killed by a lion doesn'tdepend on what do you cover in the same way that it does for a zebra?
I think the cap is not fit for purpose.
Especially, you know, especially now and especially,
with all the talk of all the future accessions into the EU,like even Ukraine alone would mean an entire rewrite of the cap.

(22:26):
It would be completely unsustainable to just, like,have them in and continue as it was.
So I suppose what I would really like to push forwould be a common food policy.
I was interested to read there that the eye they were seeing.
I can't remember the exact wording,
but it's basically what the cap should be for agricultural productionand not any sort of social intervention and stuff on the left.

(22:52):
What do you think? I'd. Bicultural production is like?That's a social intervention. It's food for people.
And what I would like to see what I like.
I think agricultural production, first of all, has becomeso much more efficient than when the cap started.
Like, you can produce vast, vast quantities, of grainwith not that much labor.

(23:13):
Like, obviously grain things like vegetables and fruits are different.
But in terms of calories produced, we can now more than ever produce
more calories per human worker than we evercould at any, any time in history.
And I don't think that's a policythat is solely built around decreasing agricultural production

(23:36):
is sufficient in this day and age.
I think anything around environmental impact,because these aren't these aren't separate.
Like,that's often things like, oh, the environment is separate agriculture.
It's the same thing, but they're always just tweaks.
And they famously have not had that much successover the last few decades in terms of
birds, in terms of insects, in terms of soil, water quality.

(23:59):
Famously, the Cap environmental projects, we're still kind ofwe're still going the wrong way in a lot of ways.
And so I would like to see a kind of policy brought in as wellthat would so a food policy and that was,
myself and another group from Mayo were part of a groupthat kind of went a, a workshop.
This proposal, must be seven years ago that,

(24:23):
for a common food policy for the EU, which would,which would basically incorporate all of these things, incorporate
not just, the agricultural production sector section of it,but all the way to that, getting on to people's plates.
What we need to do, particularly in the inthe more populated part of the world, is very much a landscape approach,

(24:43):
a negotiated approach where you look at, you don't say,we're going to rewild the whole wild, which isn't going to happen.
You really negotiate how, how and where and when.
There's very good reasons for doing that is good reasons.
Not just biodiversity, ecosystem services.
No, things are not.
But if you go in with too heavy a heavier hand, it probably won't work.

(25:06):
And we're sort of seeing this with the Europe, the EU restoration lawat the moment where there's been such huge kickback for farmers.
There's lots of reasons for that.
And it's not just about restoration,but if you go into heavily it, it won't work.
So really need, really need long term negotiation.
And in terms of bigger things like tigers and, and humanwildlife conflict, there's a lot we can do.

(25:31):
There's a lot we can do in terms of reducing risk and so on.
We can model communication systems,modern ways of, of of fencing, modern ways of alerting people.
But but you're right. It is going to be it is going to be a human cost.
We spend quite a lot of my partner.
So we spent a lot of the last ten years working on Thai conservation,on improving management standards for tiger reserves around the world.

(25:58):
And tiger numbers are going up, but more people will be killed.
And, you know, in the countries where tigers exist,
there's often a fair amount of philosophical acceptance of that,but there's going to be a limit of that as well.
That must be on the occasions, I presume, weighing heavily on on peopledoing that on various conservation

(26:20):
where it occurs, like, you know, my work,it will be direct or semi direct reason some people will get killed.
Yeah, but it's true of lots of things. It's true ofif you build a road, it's true if you build up.
We don't tend not to think about that generally,the way I explain it to students is an invasive species.

(26:40):
Is a species, plant or animal microbe, whatever that's come from oneby a geographical realm to another, generally through human transport.
Let's take something like the Chinese mitten crab from Chinais now in UK.
It's no, in Ireland, it's in Europe.
So it's coming from a very different bay
geographical area with different, environment,different evolutionary pressures, different, other species around it.

(27:06):
And quite often those species then have impact and new locationssuch as predation, competition, disease, transmission.
And because they're very new to the area in an evolutionary sense,
we can bring novel weapons such as, illegal chemicals and plantslike chameleon balsam, for example.
They can be, the native species can be naive to the introduced species,so don't recognize them as compared to the ocean predators.

(27:30):
And therefore there can be a distinct ecologicaland environmental impact.
The EU tends to think of invasive alien speciesas encompassing all of that
transport coming from a different place,becoming established and having impact.
We tend to separate out the two elements of invasivenessbeing the ability to arrive and become established in a new location.

(27:55):
Such as many species travel
on boats across the Atlantic,end up in, North American Great Lakes and establishing colonies.
But not all have impact.
Impact can be something that is almost, neutral or indeed positive.
Many species actually add to our environment.
So there are islands and continental areas, but many, many havedistinct, impacts such as zebra mussels such as peacock bar, such as

(28:24):
crayfish species that are moved around.
So we invasiveness Olympics aren't necessarily correlated.So you can be very invasive with impact.
You can be very few individuals but have huge impact.
The the story I told this morning to my students was an 1894,a lighthouse was built
on a small island, Colson Stevens, near New Zealand,and the lighthouse keeper brought a cat to the island.

(28:48):
And the cat killed the entire population.
And every last individual of a species of rain that lived on the island.
Another big one that showed up inthe responses is talking about poachers
and how you distinguish hunters and poachers,and you might think they may think that this is very easy.

(29:11):
But it is not easy.
Some would say that. Okay, who is a poacher?
Poacher is an unethical person who kills wildlife illegally, right.
And often poachers and hunters are purposefully, kind of conflated.
You sometimes see the article that says,like illegal hunters or illegal hunting.
Well, illegal hunting is poaching by definition.However, it is never that simple.

(29:36):
For example, in South America there are a lot of tribeswho are traditionally hunting animals for subsistence or otherwise.
And then government decidesthat now hunting a specific species is illegal
because a species is endangered, threatened, or somethingalong these lines, except that nobody bothered inform those people.

(30:03):
Nobody bothered to even send someone to their villagedeep into the forest to tell them that now they can't run these animals,
just inform them, never mind to get their opinionor get them on board, or get them to try to understand.
So they wake up in the morningand they do what they always do, except now they're poachers.

(30:23):
Therefore they making immoral decisions like they notthey not making any decisions.
And whether they are poachers or not,it depends on which angle you're going to look at it.
And even in, in the England I think, or in Great Britain, term poacherwhere like, you know, Robin Hood or people who are exercising

(30:45):
their rights to game animals, to wildlife that were taken away from themby, you know, kings and dukes and, you know, all these,
the loss of dung beetles
trying to feed on wood here,which is from an animal which has been wormed.

(31:07):
It's a problem.
And you could know, you could throw in pets as well in there.
So, you know, when it comes to the the changes, yes.
Agriculture has played a massive part.
The the loss of hedgerows, increasing field size,the demand for lower cost food economics.

(31:30):
But I'll throw an interesting example on this one.
I'm from was born and raised in Suffolk.
So East Anglia, you know, the, the prairies, of eastern England.
And you know, I've, you know,I walked to school when I was three or 4 or 5 years old.
So, you know, I couldn't remember what the hedgerows were like,

(31:53):
what the verges were like, the flowers, you know, we werewe were taught to go out there and identify them and recognize
and looking through the next 50 years and thinking, well,
yes, fields have got bigger with a great deal of that was post 1940,we have more monocultures.

(32:14):
We have more,
use of pesticides.
We well, we probably have less use of pesticides. It'snow that we used to.
But one thing that's disappeared from the is the mixed farming systems.
We used to have.
We used to run probably 400 beef cattle.

(32:36):
All of the farms we had, we hadmy grandfather had about seven different farming units
were surrounded by meadows.
And none of these are reseed had all of them had incredible.
But diversity.
And what's gone is these islands of biodiversityand the grazing animals that went with it.

(33:01):
And I think large parts of the world,we've lost the grazing animals from the landscapes.
And I look at Suffolk now, it's like, crikey,the only meadows I can think of.
I've got horses.
Horses are almost certainly regularly worked, which is not helping.

(33:23):
So we've actually progressed from
expanding the the monoculture of arable and,
old seed rape.
We've
then removed all, systematically removed all of the islandsand the ones that left the pony paddocks.

(33:44):
Feed and stream the American Journal, from I think 1894 or something.
And they really in detail describe how, there were so many dead ducksin this pond in the US that you could fill barrels of them
and exactly how they have diedand how that is explained as being poisoned from feeding.

(34:06):
So just ingesting,
that shot that they wouldthen take instead of grit from the bottom, to have in there.
And I guess it.
So that's a second one, the primary poisoning of ducks.
And then the fourth one would be, secondarypoisoning of predators and scavengers.

(34:28):
So this is not them actively feeding on the, bullets or shot,which is what the ducks doing.
But scavengers and predators accidentally basically feeding on this.
So say you shoot the ptarmigan without killing it.
Then he could have a guy fork, then taking itjust it's, of course, easy to take a ptarmigan that has been shot
at and maybe crippled slightly,but it's still it flew off, but it's still not flying.

(34:52):
Well, the guy Falcon will of course be more likely to take thatas compared to a completely unimpeded, ptarmigan.
And you could also have, effects from leaving gut piles.
There are many cases where this has been studiedand showing elevated lead levels in everything
from cougars, Pumas to ravens to white tailed eagles, things like that.

(35:17):
And the more of a scavenger, a species like the white lingual,the more of a problem there might be.
So in Sweden and Finland, we're talking something like 5,020% of the SeaEagles that die have such an elevated lead level that,
they died from it or would have died from itunless they flew into a power line or something.

(35:41):
And that's something they are more likely to dowhen they are affected by the that, the, the water legal is doing
fine for a population perspective,but the individuals are, of course, suffering while dying from this.
So it's still an ethical, problem.
But I would argue I that productive.
I'd love to put in a pond there to cost me,you know, a few thousand euros to do a cheap job.

(36:02):
It'd be tough.
I would spend it more if you wanted to fence it properly
and maybe plant a few trees,do a bit of landscaping around it and have it
a nice amenity feature on the farmas well as just a biodiversity feature.
Maybe we don't need that.
Maybe we just put in a, you know, dig a holeand let it filled with water, which it will in that area.
But there's a cost involved in that.
Am I supposed to do that? It does.No monetary gain for me from a farming point of view.

(36:26):
Or does the likes of the government help which supports to do that?
If we want biodiversity gain on the farmland and in the countryside?
So I can't see how people that want to improve biodiversityand want to improve nature,
it don't seem to want to engage with farmersand we need to improve and not enjoy affairs well.
And we're very well aware that now that as we move towardsnature restoration, as there is a biodiversity climate Fund,

(36:50):
we need to engage properly with that processand with the nature restoration process to make sure that
we look for the right things and we try and get the right things,and we try and get the right supports in place to make those happen.
But alongside
productive farming, rather than instead of productive farming,and some of the messages coming from nature restoration on the beginning
would have said that there will be no more roads built in certain areas,no more houses built in certain areas.

(37:16):
And if you have a farm family, there might be some going to farm.
There might be a daughter going to farm, that might be an older sibling
that wants to build a house on the farmto feel an attachment to the area.
It could be at the edge of the village,but they have ground and they have a site and they might have.
My sister has a house on the farm.
My brother's up the road from the farm,
and we were hearing that that was going to be outlawed,that there wasn't going to be any more development in certain areas.

(37:40):
So obviously alarm bells go off.
You're talking about resetting ground, resetting farmland as wellas government ground or board more on the ground or semi-state ground.
So it is a lot of misinformation out there.
There was a lot of people given a false storyof what was going to happen.
There was no economic, impact assessmentdonor for Rhode Island or for farmers.

(38:01):
There was no budget in place for us to make it happen.
So yeah, farmers got very nervous then, because there has beenother schemes that haven't worked out for farmers financially where,
ground has been made less productive in some areas.
I think you have to apply to the government to reseed to ground,and it could take two years to get a reply from them.

(38:22):
Obviously they just don't want to do it.I said of just put your file to the back and if you want to make.
I think it was two different measures that if you wanted to doany of those measures on your block of ground in areas of, conservation
that you'd have to apply to be allowed to do any of those measureswhere I can work in receipt of farm, but received a field here now.
So the control of the ground and the rights and the propertyrights of the farmer are taken away in certain circumstances.

(38:48):
And we'd, like farmers would in reason would in planning guidelines.
So and, you know, to be able to decidewhat they want to do with their own ground
rather than having everything dictated to them from Europeor from government.
Being a little bit of a devil's advocate.
But ask this question are humans natural humans part of nature?
We couldn't be more part of nature.If it what we are, we are incredibly.

(39:09):
We are part of nature. Nature's part of us.
But for quite literally thousands of years,and there's been writers that go back as beyond Aristotle,
who talk about how humans separate themselves from nature.
We go to nature.
It is, it is outside.
It's a view we have. It's like a window or a screen that we look at.

(39:31):
We see it's out there.
We're inside in our in our created, holesin our created securities behind the force field.
And, but in reality, we are driven by nature.
We evolved as, as a result of of nature.
Not an that it's a it's a process that had given rise to us.
And we are very much part of nature.

(39:51):
However, one of the biggest problemswe have as, as a, as a creature is we don't know that we are a creature.
And it's it has given rise to so much of the problems,including the type of behavior that we, we, we use
that has destroyed a great deal of the other parts of our planet and,and our climate and so on.

(40:16):
And it is that disconnect the, the, the, the removal of of ourselvesfrom nature
that we could put our finger on and say,we know if we could at least fix that, if we could reconnect.
There is a very, very big chance that we could,maybe alter our behavior to be more sustainable.
Not all human, so that there are quite a lot of humans, for example,in from indigenous communities

(40:41):
and different parts of the world up until relatively recently,and in some cases still, that are still quite part of nature,
but still indigenous peoples and ancient peoplesalso caused a lot of extinctions and problems.
Nothing like the global effects that we might have now, with possiblysome major extinctions, and you might like mammoth and so on.

(41:01):
But then we're not 100% surewhether it's climate talks, environment or hunting or so on.
So we we still even even in our in our earliest daysand the days we hadn't really developed, a society
as such, you know, we currently knowand we still had technology, very rudimentary technology.
We still had technology that impacted nature. So yes, it is.

(41:24):
Unfortunately, we do tend to see ourselves as separate,but we are in fact, we couldn't be more like nature
even if we tried emerging evidence of links in early modern literatureright through to about 1700,
which would add a thousand years on to their the present in in Scotland,which is really interesting.
So there's issues that need to be debated and discussed there for sure.

(41:48):
I think what limited ecologic evidence we have in Ireland atthe moment would suggest, and I'm thinking of Colin Guilfoyle as work,
that we just don't have the forest cover and the habitat for, for lynxand that probably means for worlds as well.
So right now I think it is extremely challenging.
But the in terms of that crystal balland it should trajectory of the coming decades is that we're likely

(42:12):
to see systematic change in larger upland areas where partlyfor climate change reasons and partly for nature restoration,
we will see large scale reforestation and also renewableenergy and recreation out competing marginal upland sheep farming.
And what that is doing is creating the habitat.

(42:32):
And as deer populations expand to fillthose forested upland areas, the prey base for both lynx and wolves.
So in I'm where it's putting a time frame on it.
But in in 2040, 2050 things may be very different.
Add tothat is the growing support for rewilding, particularly amongst urban

(42:56):
and younger individualswho are going to be the voters and the policymakers in 20 years as well.
And the Overton window, the Overton window iswhat is politically acceptable to given population at a certain time.
And right now I, I would suggest in both eyes the Overton windowis here, and above the Overton window is links reintroductions.

(43:19):
And above that is worth reintroductions.
But the Overton windowis going to start moving up in this coming decades.
And it may so happen that links reintroductions fallwithin that Overton window.
At the same time as habitat and prey have increased in upland areas.
So this is a debate that will be having for many years, many decades.

(43:39):
And lastly, what that gives us is time to really think through.
Could this work?
How do we manage deterrence and force and enterprise and compensation?
How do we solve these issues? What mechanisms do we put in placeso that farmers are listened to and the concerns are met?
While acknowledging that you can never please everyone all of the time,the outcome has very negligible risk

(44:03):
to people, to animals,and and the might be certain risk to the other plants.
But with the today's methods and knowhow and expertise and technology,that that risk is really dwindled down to almost zero.
That is why we're seeing in many countries in the world,full GMO plants being grown.

(44:25):
Even the Europe is now being more opento that US, Brazil, Canada, Argentina, wherever.
Taking full GMO plants and planting them, there's almost very negligibleregulatory required because they've understood the risk.
What you do have is the public perception based uponabout three decades ago, when this technology was really early on

(44:47):
and very in its early stages, and there were risks associated,and it was very hard to have a foolproof product and to swallow it.
There were certain risks that were associated.
There were very small incidents that aroseand they're still with us today.
But for in modern times, today and scientifically,there's no risk whatsoever.
Now, what we do is not considered GMO.

(45:09):
We use Crispr technology. We do gene editing.
We are genetically engineering the plants.
But Jim O is the means a plant with a foreign genetic material in it.
What we do using Crispr, we silence existing genes.
We don't introduce foreign genetic material.
So if you look at the plants that we sell and you look for foreigngenetic material, whereas with a GMO you will immediately

(45:35):
recognize the GMO plant with ours, you will not tell apart my plantfrom a conventional plant is a difficult balance.
I would say, you know, livestockfarming in the UK and worldwide is under continuous pressure
and so ever scrutiny isand is something that we are trying to really champion on the farm.

(45:58):
As you know,we can produce really good quality food but also conserve nature.
We can keep these biodiverse grasslandsand their flora and fauna and everything else associated with it.
We can find that balance.
And, you know,the farm was a was a traditional mixed farm back in the 30s.
You know, there was a lot of chemicals used in organic nitrogen used.

(46:21):
And now we've sort of made this poster really aligned withNatural England objectives and say, okay, let's let's think about it.
What are we doing?
And yeah, it's now a lot more nature friendly.
Farming is is really orientated around,
the, the
biodiverse grasslands that we've gotand producing what we like to call biodiverse beef from it. So,

(46:44):
it's, it's been a real challenge.
And it's still on an evolving journey, but I really start at the end,and I'm very excited to see where the farm is heading.
And has made some really goodbig steps already in that totally positive direction, for sure.
Paints a picture.How does a farm look like? What is the biodiversity on a farm?
So it's, a 650 acre farm on the southern edge of Salisbury Plain.

(47:10):
So, our neighbors are the Ministry of Defense,
and also Stonehenge.
So it's, really a landscape is full of culture. Really.
You know, it it's really big rolling hills, big open landscapes,not many trees.
We've got small areas of scrubthat predominantly these big, wide open areas of, of chalk grassland.

(47:31):
So the total, area of the farm is dominated by, the triple A size,a site of Special Scientific Interest, which is passing it down.
So it's designated back in, 1984. It,
biodiverse diversity in its flora.
So we've got some very rare plant species like the early gentian.

(47:52):
We are home to the burnt orchid, which we areone of the largest strongholds in Oxfordshire, actually, for it.
So, yeah, we've got all the different make up.
A plant species that only can survive through the grazingusing a lot of fiberboard.
So sheep and cattle and the landscape typically was grazed by sheep.
It was very sheep dominate the landscape and those sheep would move onquite regularly like kind of a as they would in the wild.

(48:17):
Moving on.
As of rotation. So but now the landscape is moved towards cattle.
Cattle are more profitable.
There's more money in them.
So, the herd of longhorns is it had always been there.They'd been there since 1939.
We are the very privileged to manage the oldest, herd of longhornsare still registering females every year.
So there's a lot of history in the landscape,a lot of history about the farm and the herd.

(48:40):
So the Longhorns have always worked on the landscape.
And we sort of treat it as one, one big area.
So we're missing out on a lot of information.
And so it's external, you know,we don't put a weight on this flashiness of a research finding.
We want people to be able to publish all of their results,including negative results or pilot studies.

(49:03):
Because that is all really important.
And when we think about, you know, you're when you're doing research,
you're trying to do right, and oftentimes it doesn't work outor you're inventing a new method or something like that.
And that finding might not fit in it to into a like
a traditional journal format, and might not be worththe thousands and thousands of dollars to publish.

(49:28):
And so it's external.
We're really trying to decrease these barriersfor sharing all of these important findings.
And it's like, you know, that's that's one angle of it.
Another reason why why so much of this research is not getting publishedis because, you know, the processes of peer review

(49:49):
haven't been designed to keep up with the pace of science.
And so, you know, I mentioned earlier,it can take years to publish an article.
And so if you have a small finding, it might not be worth itto go through that process, that that burdensome process.
And you know, I so I started SACs Journal, a few years agobecause I had one of these experiences, as I had just wrapped up

(50:15):
some some research on, you know, the effects of wildfires on carnivoresin the Pacific Northwest.
And I really worked hard to get that research outto, to the people who would be making those land management decisions.
And it took about two years to get that research published.
And, you know, during that process,
there were lots of important decisions that were actually being madewithout that research, without that up to date information.

(50:41):
And by the time it was published, you know,some people thought it was actually outdated.
And so I, I thought it was just an issue in ecology.
Right. Like that is my background.
I'm an ecologist by training.I've been doing ecology research for, you know, 15 years.
And I started talking to other researchers,and I heard that this was just a pervasive problem,

(51:01):
that people's research was not getting published.It was not making it out there.
And yet, you know, I've been in the science world for a while,and I know that scientists are smart, we're really capable,
we're really talented. And it's like, there has to be a better way.
And so through that research process, I, you know,we developed this new model of peer review that can be efficient

(51:24):
and streamlined and also very trustworthy.
I think these are good people who are doing it, out of despairand a sense
of what will wake people up, what will make a difference,what will change the action.
Extinction rebellion never set out to be disruptive or violent.

(51:46):
Factions of it had got a different view.
You know, I was up at the big London, event
when the, tube strike and people, the tube,some people were complaining about it.
So I can understand that you always get a more radical faction,but most people that I meet on marches,

(52:07):
peaceful, loving care people who are at their wit's endas to what will wake people up and what will make a difference.
And I can understand, wouldn't do it myself, but I can understand.
I mean, you've got little old ladies who look like Quakers,you know, going into museums and tapping things.
You know, they're my favorite two, actually.

(52:29):
They would not do thatunless they genuinely believed the world is in true peril.
And what were your your feelings when you heard about the,the the lengthy prisons sentences for the activists?
And, horrified?
I'm really horrified.
I think the fact that we're criminalizingin the UK and England in particular,

(52:54):
peaceful protest that the government has made it almost impossible
to give civil disobedience in a mannerthat is respected and kind of responded to.
We've gone to a place that is criminalizing,I think, good people who have an important message.

(53:17):
Do you think that the the, you know, U.S.,through their military personnel or some other ways, are pressurizing
NGOs who are, fighting against the resumption of, of of whalingbecause surely they are not stoked having those organizations, around.

(53:38):
Right?
Because those NGOsthen are going head on against the national interests.
And that's a serious stuff.
Oh, yeah. And in fact,I know someone who's been going to meetings for, decades.
And she told me when she started going, some guy from the State
Department came up and was prodding her in the chest saying,you know, get it, girly, this is about national security.

(54:02):
Well, you know, I.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's it's it's, you know, it's a bit like another thingI've got to commondreams.
It's a piece about elephants,
because, you know, there was that belief that,
you know, ivory was the white gold of jihad, and,it turned out it wasn't true at all,

(54:25):
but it got the US military and security communityinterested in this stuff, and and.
Yeah, and then they just engage.
And I found that that was really interestingbecause, you know, I used to work at Noa and at the time we had,
when I was there, at one point,
we had someone from the State Department who happened to be around theretalking about some stuff, and they talking about how when, at the time

(54:46):
was Secretary of State, Clinton came back from a meeting and said,what's this about Ivory being involved in and, supporting terrorism?
And apparently she went to the national security community.
And now, just like that, we don't know where the because the bottom lineis, is that if it's not geopolitical, these folks aren't interested.

(55:07):
I mean, animals don't matter to them.
You know, these interactions by countries that matter to them.
And I like Damascus Glass, the NGO community.
So there's always been this pushback.
And and we've seen that play outand the kind of bunch of guys over wailing, it's just the way the media,
used the word almost as,

(55:28):
almost as a tactic to, to, to create a reaction that they want.
Often people use it. I see it on the news a lot.
The word is usedand see on all these different TV programs here on the radio, and
you can tell they don't really understand,you know, the context they're using the word in.
So they just use it to label everything.And I mean it's a difficult one.

(55:50):
It's a new word.
It, you know, they say in the introduction to the book,
if there's 14 of us that write in the book,if you put us all in a room together and wouldn't let us out
until we came up with an agreed definition, we'd still be there,because it is one of those words that's very hard to define.
I mean, I say that we're, you know, we're singingfrom the same hymn sheet, but we're kind of singing different words.
Perhaps even though we're all in harmony together,in our general feeling, it's, you know, they're all

(56:17):
there is an official definition of rewilding,which I find quite interesting, quite ironic,
because at the end of the day, rewilding is about,
humans stepping back and in nature take control.
And yet we still want to keep it within the strict parameters of whatthat word means.
I don't think there's one overall misconceptionthat's problematic because

(56:38):
everybody in the, you know, everyone in the book writesabout their own specific, misconception or myth or misunderstanding.
So, I don't know.
I mean, for me, I guess it's it's that feeling that humans still haveto be in control and decide the outcomes of what they're doing.
And we have a we have a very, very strong need to always be in controlno matter what it is.

(56:59):
And you do see some great examples of supposed rewilding projectswhere they actually want the outcome to look like
this, rather than allowing nature to, to, to decide,it will not decide just to let it happen.
You know, there's still oh, actually, we want our woodland.We want to not woodland. Have bluebells and oak trees,
you know, and they try and control it and not.

(57:21):
That isn't really what rewilding should be about.
It should be about giving, natural processes the range to,to do what they do, as I've said, you know, I mean, where my,
my strongest expertise is, is, is on agriculture.
And, maybe I can take that as an examplebecause, I think that, you know, this is where, obviously,

(57:45):
we do see,I mean, it's it's it's a sector, an activity that does impact a lot.
Oh, no, I'm not sure I resources at the moment, in general,in biodiversity, in particular.
Why is it so difficult?
I mean, we have been, farming and let's say consumingalso agriculture projects in a certain way for, for decades.

(58:06):
And, while it is clear from science that if we continue as we do,we won't be able to stay within planetary boundaries.
And, eventually, we will hit the wall.
I mean, to put it bluntly and simply, and it's not just, you know,
something that will have

(58:27):
impacts people outside of the, of the sector, but the sector itself,you know, farming will be among the first victims.
I mean, we see that already with climate changeand, and, the loss of what nature is, etc..
So why, despite not just the knowledge that what is happeningin front of our very eyes, things are not changing.

(58:48):
And and why?
Because we do have policies in place.And I think this is also important to, to stress.
You know, there are several environmental policy that have been adopted,you know, in the past decades that are out there
on, on water, the Water Directive on Biodiversity and HabitatsDirective.
And the problem does not lie with the policies themselves.

(59:10):
It lies with the implementation and the fact that Member Statesare not implementing them as they should.
So why are we there?
The problem is it is systemic.
This is why it's so difficult to tackle it.
And I take the example of agriculture because it is quite obvious
we're not going to manage to change our agricultural practicesif we are not changing the food system as a whole.
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