The Labour government has published details of badger culling licenses that could result in the targeting of almost 40,000 additional badgers in 2024. These culls, across the High-Risk bovine TB area in England, will be in addition to the 230,000 that have been killed since licensed culling was introduced in 2013.

The licenses cover 20 ‘intensive cull zones’, which are on their third or fourth year of intensive culling, plus 26 ‘supplementary licenses’ extending the culls in zones which have completed four years of intensive culling. Badger populations in some of these latter zones are now being targeted for the ninth consecutive year, while other zones have been issued supplementary licenses for the first time.

The government has also published licenses for two new cull zones in the Low-Risk TB area in England, one in Lincolnshire and one in Cumbria, but has not released figures detailing how many badgers can be targeted.

  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Humans are part of nature too and there are species for which humans have been their main predator for thousands of years and that makes humans the predator required to keep a balance in their population, seals and deers (no matter how cute they are) being two examples in Canada.

    Anticosti island shows what happens without any population control, deers had to start eating coniferous trees and you can have tens of thousands dying of sickness or starvation in a single year.

    • Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      What you are saying is technically true. Humans are keeping numbers of animals down by culling them. But humans are also keeping numbers of animals up to make money from them. There would be no bovine TB if people weren’t breeding millions of cows, keeping them in confined spaces and transporting them all over the place.

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Sure, that’s a separate debate though, I’m just saying that what’s happening with badgers and Namibian seals might actually be necessary.