Damian
Carrington Environment editor
Friday 7 July 2017 15.39 BST
Last modified on Friday 7 July 2017 22.00 BST
After an absence of 1,300 years,
the lynx could be back in UK forests by the end of 2017. The Lynx UK Trust has
announced it will apply for
a trial reintroduction for six lynx into the Kielder forest,
Northumberland, following a two-year
consultation process with local stakeholders.
The secretive cat can grow to
1.5m in length and feeds almost exclusively by ambushing deer. Attacks on
humans are unknown, but it was hunted to extinction for its fur in the UK. The
Kielder forest was chosen by the trust from five possible sites, due to its
abundance of deer, large forest area and the absence of major roads.
Sheep farmers and some
locals are opposed to the reintroduction, but Dr Paul O’Donoghue,
chief scientific advisor to the Lynx UK Trust and expert adviser to the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) believes there are
good reasons for reintroducing the predator.
“Lynx belong here as much as hedgehogs,
badgers, robins, blackbirds - they are an intrinsic part of the UK
environment,” he told the Guardian. “There is a moral obligation. We killed
every single last one of them for the fur trade, that’s a wrong we have to
right.”
Rural communities would also
benefit from eco-tourism, O’Donoghue said: “They will generates tens of
millions of pounds for struggling rural UK economies. Lynx have already been
reintroduced in the Harz mountains in Germany. They have branded the whole area
the ‘kingdom of the lynx’. Now it is a thriving ecotourism destination and we
thought we could do exactly the same for Kielder,” he said.
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