Category: UK Crypto


An unsuspecting fisherman has caught a rather scary looking giant crab off the coast of Cornwall.

A fishing boat has landed the biggest crab ever found in British waters. The giant box crab is more than 3ft 3in long and normally lives on the seabed about 3km below the surface, but was caught by the fishing boat Harvest Reaper in much shallower water 80 miles west of The Isles of Scilly.

The boat’s skipper, Matthew Keast, handed the crab to Blue Reef Aquarium in Newquay when he returned to harbour. Aquarium manager David Waines described the find as “astonishing”.

“When you see him close up, he makes your flesh crawl with his long legs,” he said. “It’s like something from Alien or The Thing.”

http://www.motorboatsmonthly.co.uk/news/451757/giant-crab-found-in-cornish-waters

Bumble Bees as Big as Mice

Bumble bees as big as `flying mice’ have been spotted by nature lovers across the country, it has been claimed.

But there is no need to worry, experts say, because they are probably not as large as some spotters have made them out to be.

`All the queen bees have come out with the fabulous weather and they’re very obvious as they fly low looking for food and a site to nest,’ said Natural History Museum entomologist Stuart Hine.

`They’re not bigger than they have been before – it’s very much to do with human observation.’

Only the far larger queen bees and wasps hibernate to survive the winter, with the smaller workers and males dying in the autumn, he said.

http://www.metro.co.uk/news/822245-bumble-bees-as-big-as-mice-in-uk-are-probably-not-as-big-as-you-think

WATCHING WILDER LIFE

WATCHING WILDER LIFE

18/09/2006

(Source: Daily Mirror – 18th September 2006)

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2006/09/18/watching-wilder-life-115875-17767408

THERE have been more than 10,000 sightings of wild and exotic animals in the UK in five years, a study shows today.

More reports were of big cats (5,391) and sharks (3,389) sharks but members of the public also claim to have seen 51 wallabies, 10 crocodiles, three pandas and a penguin.

Climate change, zoo thefts and animal escapes are contributing to the rise in exotic animals, the website Beastwatch UK claims.

Founder Chris Mullins said: “There’s far more exotic animals in the UK than people imagine.”

Thirteen dangerous spiders were reported to the site including a tarantula and a black widow.

Police warning after monkey escapes from Cumbrian zoo

Capuchin monkeys are native to the Amazon basin
A search is under way after a South American monkey escaped from a wild animal park in Cumbria.

The small beige Capuchin went missing from his enclosure at the South Lakes Wild Animal Park in Dalton.

Staff from the centre, which is home to dozens of exotic animals, called in police to help in the search operation.

Capuchins are native to the Amazon basin, about 20ins (51cm) high and recognisable by a distinctive black or dark brown head with dark sideburns.

Distracting drivers

Karen Brewer from the zoo said it was unclear how the monkey had got out of its enclosure.

She added: “It’s only a small monkey so it is not going to hurt anybody or anything like that.

“It will be really scared and just wanting to get back home.

“So we would appeal to anyone who comes across it to contact us or the police.”

A Cumbria Police spokesman said: “If it is seen crossing the road it will obviously distract drivers and could cause crashes.

“Staff from the wildlife park are currently searching the area for the monkey and would like to stress that although it is not thought to be a danger to the public, it should not be approached.”

Capuchin monkeys are tree-dwelling and known to use tools such as stones to crack open nuts, shellfish and crabs.

Their ability to be easily trained gave rise to their early exploitation as organ grinder monkeys.

They were named by explorers after their resemblance to an order of Catholic friars, the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin.

(Source: BBC News – 8th April 2010)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cumbria/8610246.stm

Customs’ 4,000 exotic reptiles seizures revealed

Baby Caiman crocodiles

In the past four years 220 caiman crocodiles have been seized

UK customs officials have seized 4,040 endangered reptiles – including 1,000 tortoises – in the past four years, a parliamentary question has revealed.

Wildlife minister Huw Irranca-Davies revealed the seizures in response to a question by Tory MP Andrew Rosindell.

All the animals were seized by HM Revenue and Customs under an international agreement banning the trade in endangered species, he said.

Officials also seized 322 endangered birds over the same period.

Home Office Minister Phil Woolas revealed the second set of figures in reply to a separate Commons question from Mr Rosindell.

Mr Irranca-Davies also revealed a breakdown of all the seizures made under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in the past four years.

In 2005-6, the total of animals seized was 1,336 – including 501 leopard tortoises, 220 caimans – a reptile related to the crocodile – 149 royal pythons and 170 terrapins – in 27 seizures.

This compared with 1,313 creatures in 2006-7 – including 325 terrapins, 294 spiny tailed lizards and 138 leopard tortoises – found in 38 seizures.

In 2007-8, a total of 21 seizures resulted in 347 reptiles being recovered, including 200 tortoises.

And in 2008-9, 1,044 specimens – including 356 turtles, 111 leopard tortoises, 100 hingeback tortoises and 98 spiny-tailed lizards – were found in 32 seizures.

 
(Source: BBC News – 24th March 2010)

Go wild with Chris and join his hunt for exotic animals

Thursday, April 08, 2010, 09:30

This is Leicestershire

A hunt is on to chase up reports of exotic beasts lurking in the British countryside.

Loughborough wildlife enthusiast Chris Mullins wants people to help him investigate countrywide sightings of animals such as wolves and boar.

Animals reported to have been seen in Leicestershire have included the ostrich-like rhea, raccoons, polecats, various snakes and even tarantulas.

Elsewhere in the UK there are flocks of parakeets and colonies of wallabies, while the Kentish docklands are reportedly home to yellow-tailed scorpions.

Chris, 58, wants volunteers to join the hunt and help with his website. He launched BeastWatch UK in 2001 to gather reports of exotic sightings and map them online

The group, which has about 100 members, gets reports of sightings almost daily. By following some of the tip-offs, Chris said he had three sightings of big cats around Whitwick.

However, he is leaving the cats to another organisation – Rutland and Leicestershire Panther Watch Group – and concentrating BeastWatch UK on other species.

He thinks exotic animals have arrived by means such as escaping from private enclosures or being released after changes in the law on ownership.

BeastWatch was a big part of Chris’s life until 2004, when he was diagnosed with cancer of the oesophagus.

He said: “When I became ill, the upkeep of our website and database began to slide.

“Reports would keep coming in but it became too hard for me to keep up, so I’ve had to watch it slowly roll further downhill.

“Thanks to the help of the medical profession, family and friends, I have now come through the other side and I am determined to get BeastWatch UK up and running as it was.

“For this I need the help of some volunteers.”

He also wants to find a boat owner to help him mount an underwater camera investigation into something big and mysterious lurking in the depths of Stonebow Lake, in Loughborough.

He said: “It could be a pike, but if so, it is a very big pike. There are other exotics which could fit. Snapping turtles are very aggressive creatures.

“They were purchased back in the 1980s by children during the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle craze.

“Even though they have no teeth, they can take your finger clean off. These are now all over the waterways in the UK.”

A spokesman for Twycross Zoo said the only case they knew of was reports of a big cat at Hopworth Woods, Tamworth, in Staffordshire.

The spokesman said: “Is it a prank, has someone really seen something, or is it a big moggie or black Labrador? We don’t know because we have never seen anything.”

www.beastwatch.co.uk

Villains, Victors and Victims: The Great Invasions of Britain

March 2010. Alien invaders are the focus of a special edition of the People’s Trust for Endangered Species’ assessment of the challenges facing Britain’s wildlife. The State of Britain’s Mammals report, written for the Trust by Professor David Macdonald and Dr Dawn Burnham from the University of Oxford, Department of Zoology’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), provides an overview of research carried out by wildlife and conservation experts across the country and in this particular instalment, explores issues around invasive mammalian species and their impact on our native ecosystem.

14 invasive mammal species in the UK
Invasive animals are transported around the globe beyond their native range, either intentionally or accidentally through the movement of people and products. There are 14 invasive mammal species in Britain today (see table), most of which were deliberately brought to the country through a combination of aesthetic, economic and scientific reasons. Some non-native mammals, such as rabbits and house mice, arrived in the UK about 1,000 years ago and have since integrated into the country’s natural community. Other more recent arrivals are regarded as distinctly “unBritish”, such as mink imported from North America to stock the British fur trade.

Effects of `alien’ species
Although some invasive species arrived long ago, the report’s authors suggest that the decision to consider a naturalised non-native species as an `ecological’ citizen hinges solely on the nature of the damage to our environment and native wildlife, whether economic or biological, and whether there is the possibility of remedial action. The ecological effects that invasive species have on native populations and landscapes vary from negligible to devastating. The report highlights five consequences of the arrival of non-native species to our shores:

* Predation – interactions between invasive predators and their prey varies, but can threaten extinction such as the case of American mink which devastated the native water vole population, already under threat from loss of habitat. Globally, predation is the cause of about a third of the documented negative impacts of invasive mammals.
* Competition – competition can be indirect (`exploitation competition’) such as grey squirrels competing for seeds hidden by red squirrels, or direct (`interference competition’) such as the struggle between American mink and the recovering otter population in the UK.

* Disease – infectious diseases carried by invasive species may be benign to their hosts, but have dire consequences when introduced to new communities. For example, the brown rat carries parasites and pathogens which can infect humans and livestock.
* Hybridization – cross-breeding can occur between closely related species, such as indigenous red deer and sika deer, or Scottish wildcats and domestic cats.
* Ecosystem – some invasions can affect entire ecosystems, such as rabbits whose grazing maintains chalky grassland, dune and heathland.

Rabbits were introduced by the Normans in the
12th century. Photo credit Pauline Tweedy

Globalisation may bring further threats
Factors such as globalisation and climate change mean that the threat of further mammal introductions to the UK and their potential long-term success remains high, though difficult to predict. Prevention of further invasions is desirable, providing a more cost-effective option than eradication, and some UK policy and legislation does aim to regulate and monitor invasive mammals and control schemes (e.g. The Wildlife and Countryside Act of 1981, Natural England’s invasive non-native species framework strategy). Indeed in some instances, there are obligations to consider the re-introduction of some native species which have gone extinct, mostly due to the interaction of humankind, as in the case of beavers which were already rare in England by the 10th century and are now extinct in this country.

Water voles and red squirrels threatened
Jill Nelson, CEO of PTES highlights: “Our campaign to conserve Britain’s native mammals is rooted in finding more about each animal’s behaviour in response to the various threats they face and translating that knowledge into practical conservation action. The incursion of non-native mammals into Britain is a major threat to water voles and red squirrels, two of our fastest declining species, and resolving the complex issues around how we deal with this problem is a vital component in preventing their extinction.”

Some invasive species much more problematical than others
Report author David Macdonald says: “The story of invasive mammals in Britain makes it plain that anybody who thinks conservation problems are something that occurs in exotic, far-off places has completely missed the point. The same issues and dilemmas are rampant is our own back yard. We are all stakeholders in conserving biodiversity, at home and abroad. Britain’s invasive mammals illustrate how intricately biological and ethical problems are interwoven. Our report makes clear that there is no simple, one-size-fits-all solution – not all invasive mammals are equally problematic: the grey squirrel, the American mink, the edible dormouse and Chinese water deer each show that every case is a special case”. He adds: “In general, it’s too late to winkle out the invasive mammals that have established here – so the big lesson learnt is that it’s important to prevent further invasions in future: prevention is better than cure.”

Ethics and public opinion play a large part in the control of non-native mammals and will continue to feed the ongoing debate about the Britishness of new mammal arrivals. Perhaps the best example to illustrate this point is the public’s love-hate relationship with some invaders, such as the grey squirrel who competes with native red squirrels and causes forestry damage, yet entertains young and old alike with its acrobatic antics.
Britain’s great mammal invaders

Species

Native range

UK origin

UK threat/significance

American mink

North America

Fur farms, 1929

Predation of native water vole

Ferret

Europe

Rabbit hunting, 12th C

Hybridisation with polecat

Rabbit

Iberian peninsula

Normans, 12th C

Agricultural pests; prey to natives; but maintains calcareous grassland by grazing

Brown hare

Europe

Romans

UK BAP species since 1995; hare coursing with dogs is illegal

Muntjac

China and Taiwan

Woburn Park, 1901

Pests in conservation woodland

Japanese sika deer

Japan

Zoological Society of London, 1860

Hybridization with red deer; impact on forestry

Chinese water deer

East China and Korea

Whipsnade, 1929

Low impact; UK numbers may represent 10% of global population

Fallow deer

Anatolia

Normans, 11th C

Impact on woodland and arable damage

Grey squirrel

North America

Multiple introductions, 1876

Competition and disease transmission to native red squirrel

Edible dormouse

Europe and Anatolia

Tring, 1902

Potential impact on forestry and nuisance to dwellings

Brown rat

Asia

Shipping, 1720

Pests to agriculture, health and native birds

Black rat

Asia

Romans

Rare in Britain

House mouse

Africa and Asia

Iron Age

Pests to agriculture, health and native species

Red-necked wallaby

South Australia and Tasmania

Whipsnade, 1940s

Potential threat to capercaillie on Loch Lomond island

http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/invasive-mammals101.html

Concern over non-native species
By Wire News Sources on April 4, 2010

A number of non-native mammal species are damaging the UK countryside by eating crops and threatening wildlife, a conservation charity has warned.

A report by the People’s Trust for Endangered Species identified 14 problem species including rats, American mink and muntjac deer.

The trust said some of the creatures have been in the UK for so long, they are thought of as indigenous.

It said it was important to stop the extinction of native species.

Practical action

According to the report, two of the UK’s fastest declining native species – the red squirrel and the water vole – which has declined by 90% – are under threat by mammals introduced by humans in the last two centuries.

American minks prey on water voles while grey squirrels, which were introduced to the UK in the 19th century carry the deadly squirrelpox virus and outcompete the native red squirrel when it comes to hunting for food and habitats.

The trust also warned the red-necked wallaby is capable of damaging capercaillie birds on Loch Lomond island.

People’s Trust chief executive Jill Nelson said: “Our campaign to conserve Britain’s native mammals is rooted in finding more about each animal’s behaviour in response to the various threats they face and translating that knowledge into practical conservation action.”

She said the way with how the UK dealt with the problem was a “vital component in preventing their extinction”.

Further invasions

The trust said the species can have a negative impact on UK wildlife, landscape and agriculture. This range of problems include carrying disease, breeding with species to produce hybrids and altering the landscape and damaging crops.

The report also warned that global trade and a changing climate could lead to the invasion of more alien species.

Other species to have made the list include house mice and rabbits.

But the report, researched by professor David Macdonald and doctor Dawn Burnham from the University of Oxford Wildlife Conservation Research Unit acknowledged, that while rabbits are mainly seen as a pest, they can also have a positive conservation effect in particular areas where they graze.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

(Source: Herald De Paris – 4th April 2010)

http://www.heralddeparis.com/concern-over-non-native-species/81657

Could we see sturgeon swimming in our river systems in the near future?

Experts predict sturgeon could colonise our river systems

By Angling Times

Fishery News

01 April 2010 17:30

British anglers could soon find themselves battling prehistoric giant sturgeon in some of the nation’s rivers, Angling Times can exclusively reveal this week.

While the capture of tackle-trashing giant sturgeon is the kind of sport usually associated with expensive fishing holidays to Canada’s British Columbia, it is becoming increasingly likely that these remarkable fish will appear in our rivers over the coming years.

While there are no records of the common, or European, sturgeon breeding in the UK, there are records of historical catches both by commercial fishermen and rod and line anglers, topped by Alec Allen’s capture from the River Towy of a 9ft 2ins long, 388lb official record in July 1933, the biggest British fish ever caught from freshwater on rod and line.

And, due to a huge restocking effort to protect the last-known spawning population in Europe on France’s Lower Gironde river, with artificially-reared fish being stocked in 2007, 2008 and 2009, chances are UK anglers could soon do battle with them while fishing for other species.

“It is possible that adolescent sturgeon may appear in UK coastal waters and river estuaries within the next five years,” said an EA spokesperson.

“We will be developing a detailed record of where the species has been recorded in the UK as part of European-wide conservation efforts. The species spends the first decade of its life around estuaries, and expert opinion in France has said it is possible that during this time the sturgeon migrate to other estuaries,” they added.

While there are no plans to reintroduce sturgeon to UK waters, the Gironde situation will be closely monitored and used to shape future policy.

And confirmed sightings in UK rivers over the past 15 years, together with the sale of a 10ft, 260lb-plus specimen caught from Swansea Bay in 2004, suggest that it is only a matter of time before an angler receives the shock of their life by hooking into one.

STURGOEN FACTFILE

A prehistoric-looking, scale-less fish with five distinctive rows of bony plates, known as ‘scutes’, running the length of the body
Dark grey/black back fading to lighter underside, often with green or yellow colouration
The head features an extended snout with two sets of barbules and an underslung, extendable mouth
In the 1930s, anglers landed two sturgeon from rivers in South Wales, one of which was reported to have weighed in at more than 440lb
A 320lb sturgeon overturned two coracles and broke three nets during its capture on the Towy in June 1896
Recent confirmed sightings on the Towy occurred in June 1986, June 1990 and June 1993
In 1860, a fish was caught from the Great Ouse at Hemmingford Grey, in Cambridgeshire, more than 40 miles from the sea.

(Source: Angling Times – 1st April 2010)

http://www.gofishing.co.uk/Angling-Times/Section/News–Catches/Fisheries-News/April-2010/Sturgeon-in-our-rivers/

Six-foot snake goes on the loose in Leicester

Tuesday, March 16, 2010, 09:30

People have been warned to keep an eye on small pets after reports of a 6ft black snake at large in gardens.Worried residents of Shetland Road, in Belgrave, Leicester, have also been advised to keep windows and doors closed as the reptile could try to get into homes in a bid to keep warm.

Some residents have sprinkled flour on their patios to track the path of the snake, which has left long tracks winding across lawns.

One has put up a scarecrow to try to keep the creature, thought to be a “harmless” Mexican Black Kingsnake, at bay.

Suveena Bali, 19, who lives in Shetland Road, saw the snake on Saturday, March 6, and reported it to the RSPCA.

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