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Mass cull of grey squirrels wins minister's backing



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Published Date: 28 August 2008
SCOTLAND'S environment minister has thrown his weight behind plans to kill thousands of grey squirrels to protect their red cousins from extinction.

Launching an initiative to create a no-go zone for grey squirrels across the south of Scotland, Michael Russell said "humane destruction" of grey squirrels is "absolutely necessary".

Grey squirrels carry a pox that does not harm them but is le
thal to the native reds.

As revealed by The Scotsman last month, the initiative by the Red Squirrels in South Scotland project will seek to halt the spread of the squirrelpox virus by creating a buffer zone.

It will rely on landowners and the public to help catch grey squirrels using a trap loan scheme. Thousands of grey squirrels are expected to be humanely killed.

Mr Russell, speaking from the Drumlanrig Estate in Dumfries and Galloway, said: "The red squirrel is one of our most beautiful and valuable native species and Scotland is one of the few sanctuaries it has left.

"Since its arrival in the British Isles, the grey squirrel has gradually taken over with its more aggressive feeding habits, meaning that its red cousin is now endangered.

"To make matters worse, a new threat is heading north in the form of squirrelpox, lethal to the red squirrel and almost endemic in the grey population."

He said squirrelpox is already spreading alarmingly across southern Scotland, and there is only a short time to save the red squirrel from the brink of extinction.

He added: "Humane destruction of grey squirrels is absolutely necessary to make the project's aims a reality. There is simply no alternative."

Conservative MSP Murdo Fraser, who has campaigned to help the red squirrel, called for further action to be taken to aid the species in other parts of Scotland.





The full article contains 303 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 27 August 2008 8:59 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Squirrels
 
1

jerrymanders,

28/08/2008 01:06:44
What has a hazelnut in every bite?
2

donald anderson it's me,

28/08/2008 06:25:15
Dye them ginger
3

Boy Wonder,

28/08/2008 07:40:23
You too can do your bit ...

Cheap Squirrel snack
Half a pound of diced squirrel meat
cheap can of any kind of beans
large tub of cheese spread,
4 or 5 strips of bacon
or a few links of sausage
a few slices of cheap white bread
Fry up the squirrel and drain off most of the fat. Cook the bacon (or sausage) and put aside.
Then heat the beans and cheese together adding the squirrel towards the end.
Now toast 6-8 slices of bread, pour the mix over the toast and top with crumbled bacon or sausage.
Wash it down with cheap whisky or beer.

Serves 2-4

This is a quick and easy brunch, lunch or dinner and you can add all sorts of extras to it to spice it up
(but why would you want to ruin a good thing?).

Then there's

Squirrel Nut Zippers

2 breasts of squirrel
2 or 3 diced leeks
a quarter of a pound of shaved almonds
10 whole shelled almonds
Half a litre of Amaretto

Cover bottom of pan with shaved almonds and spread the squirrel breasts on top.
Drizzle Amaretto on the remaining almonds until pasty,
then bunch the leftover shaved almonds around the breasts to form a ridge.
Place whole almonds in a zig-zag pattern between the two breasts.
Spread leeks lightly on top of the squirrel meat and drizzle more Amaretto on the whole dish.
Drink the remaining Amaretto, whilst baking the dish at 275 for 50 minutes.

Serves 2






4

,

28/08/2008 07:42:28
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

Selgovae,

Scottish Borders 28/08/2008 07:55:17
Why is everyone so concerned about saving red squirrels. If you want to see one, hop over to Germany. I was in Bonn the other week and watched red squirrels playing in trees in the town centre. Very cute, but I think the grey ones here are more entertaining and can execute more difficult acrobatic routines.
6

sam the god,

28/08/2008 08:18:50
Have been killing and eating them for years even got my son into shooting them last year all we need now is a bounty to be paid on them.
7

ignorant townie?,

Scotland 28/08/2008 12:03:44
Ah...what a godsend to the bloodthirsty amongst us...let me at the varmints...

Very sad its come to this...but people have been attempting to control greys pretty much unsuccessfully for decades[its legal, unlike the widespread killing of birds of prey going on by the same people].

Now...who let these american pests out in the first place?... estate owners?? [and I dont mean automobiles]
8

Nomada,

28/08/2008 13:20:07
Excellent thinking, #5. Now, why not hop over to the USA if you want to see Grey Squirrels doing their acrobatics (that being, apparently, the standard against which you measure ecological worth)?
9

Selgovae,

Scottish Borders 28/08/2008 14:25:03
#8 "that being, apparently, the standard against which you measure ecological worth"

I never mentioned ecological worth, but now that you've brought up the subject, how would you measure it? Are we to accept that creatures that are less able to survive on their own have more ecological worth than those that get along just fine? Or is there a master plan (and presumably a designer) that says that red squirrels belong in Scotland, and grey squirrels don't.
10

FLUB,

a rocky outcrop in eastern central Scotland 28/08/2008 14:49:51
Southern Skye is advocating a cull of mink over at the story about the otters - perhaps ministers could combine the two?
11

Nomada,

28/08/2008 15:39:56
#9 - You ask, in terms, do 'red squirrels belong in Scotland, and grey squirrels don't?'. The answer is simple - 'Yes', just like Polar Bears belong in the Arctic and Lions don't.
12

Partan,

Fife 28/08/2008 16:21:45
Selgovae.
You don't have to think too long and hard to find other examples of disastrous introductions of alien species. The post below yours mentions mink for a kick-off. Yesterday we had the cotoneaster/burnet moth report. Ruddy duck in Europe, cats almost everywhere, cane toads and rabbits in Australia....
13

Beth Boyle,

NY 28/08/2008 18:37:19
Freeze them and send them hame so I can eat them roasted on an opened fire here in the country!
14

Beth Boyle,

Hungry in Rural NY 28/08/2008 18:40:33
1/2 pound of smoked bacon, cubed
4 squirrels, cut in pieces
2 medium onions, chopped
1 stalk of celery, chopped
4 cups of chicken broth
Salt to taste
Pinch of thyme
Dash or two of hot pepper sauce

Brown bacon, remove and set aside. Brown squirrel in drippings left from browning bacon; remove and set aside. Add onions and celery to drippings and saute two minutes. Add squirrel and bacon and enough chicken broth to cover bottom of pot; add seasonings. Cover and cook on a low heat, adding broth a little at a time as it needs replacing until squirrels are tender - about 1 hour.

Rabbit may be cooked in this manner.
15

Selgovae,

Scottish Borders 28/08/2008 18:50:13
#11 "just like Polar Bears belong in the Arctic and Lions don't"

It's not just like that. If you dropped lions in the Arctic and they thrived like grey squirrels do here, I think we'd be strongly questioning our knowledge of nature and whether we're fit to make decisions about what belongs where.

#12

I know what you're saying, but can grey squirrels really be described as a disastrous introduction. I know they are a pest in the cities, but where I am they are less of a pest than rabbits. There are perhaps two issues. One is whether grey squirrels are a pest. The second is whether they are displacing red squirrels, and if so, is that really a problem when red squirrels seem to do just fine in other locations.
16

Nomada,

28/08/2008 19:37:19
#15 - it is precisely like that. Your understanding of natural history, ecology and zoogeography is patently worse than elementary, and therefore your opinions on the subject are not worth a hill of beans.

If you knew anything significant of the subject, or even read the article, you would know that the urgent problem at the moment is the transmission of squirrel pox from Grey to Red, not the matter of whether they are a pest in cities or whether Reds 'do just fine' elsewhere.
17

Selgovae,

Scottish Borders 28/08/2008 20:19:06
#16 "the urgent problem at the moment is the transmission of squirrel pox"

As your knowledge of natural history, ecology and zoogeography is apparently better than mine, would you please explain the why the spread squirrel pox is an urgent problem. Or are you satisfied with the explanation in the article?

 

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