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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.

March 2010.

Mystery surrounds the death of 75 starlings which crashed to the ground and died on a single driveway in Somerset. The birds were spotted falling from the sky and onto the driveway of a house in Coxley, Somerset, on Sunday 7 March.

RSPCA animal welfare officer (AWO) Alison Sparkes was alerted to the unusual incident by the police and went to help. She discovered that most of the birds had suffered broken beaks, broken legs and wings and abdominal injuries, but were otherwise in good bodily condition.

All but five of the birds were dead and, sadly, the rest had to be put to sleep by veterinary staff at the RSPCA’s West Hatch Wildlife Centre, Taunton, Somerset, due to their severe injuries.

Alison said: “It was a remarkable sight and I’ve never seen anything like it before. Onlookers said they heard a whooshing sound and then the birds just hit the ground. They had fallen onto the ground in quite a small area, about 12 feet in diameter.

“They appeared to be in good condition other than injuries that they appear to have suffered when they hit they ground. Our best guess is that this happened because the starlings were trying to escape a predator such as a sparrow hawk and ended up crash landing.”

There is no evidence that the birds had been poisoned or were ill before they crashed into the ground.

Burmese python loose on UK housing estate

Mar 10th 2010 By Simon Crisp

Police have warned that a giant Burmese python is thought to be on the loose in a Northampton housing estate.

It’s not known where the snake – which is said to be several feet long – came from, but locals have spotted it slithering in the undergrowth at Lingswood.

Cops were called to a sighting yesterday morning, but say the snake somehow evaded capture – it was last seen entering a nearby wooded area.

The snake is believed to be a green Burmese Python, the largest subspecies of the Indian python and native to areas of Southern and Southeast Asia.

They can grow up to 12 feet long and eat appropriately-sized birds and mammals, killing their prey by seizing it with their teeth and contracting their body around them.

Officers are telling residents to be alert and not to approach the beast if they see it (they wouldn’t need to tell us that twice) instead they should call 999 or the RSPCA.

It’s probably a good idea to keep your cat indoors for a day or two, as well.

Friday, April 02, 2010 8:06 PM
Subject: Wallaby spotted

My sighting wasn’t in Northampton, but a village called Long itchingham in Warwickshire.  Not that far away.
I am a HGV driver and travel from Maidstone, Kent, to Coventry each night. Last night I chose to drive up the M40 and came off at junction 11 to join the A423 to Coventry because of heavy congestion on the M1 (my normal route).  It was a little after midnight while driving through Long Itchingham, I spotted what I first thought was a kangaroo. I slowed for a look and realised that at about 3’6″ it was too small. It didn’t run off even after I almost stopped. It was raining hard and it’s brown coat was soaking wet. It was nibbling grass on the verge and looked at me, then carried on nibbling.  It was on it’s own as far as I could tell.
My mates didn’t believe me and thought I had been drinking (I’m tea total). First time I have ever seen one in this country.
Have seen colonies of pure white rabbits, and pure black ones running wild, but this is obviously a case of domestic ones getting amongst the wild variety and doing what rabbits do best.
Thought my sighting might interest you.

With Regards to the following piece Chris Mullins of Beastwatch UK has been on the case from the beginning and is monitoring the lake with underwater cameras and a boat! He will keep us informed of any developments.

http://www.beastwatch.co.uk/

Mystery duck-eating predator lurking in Leicestershire lake

http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/news/Mystery-duck-eating-predator-lurking-Leicestershire-lake/article-1947811-detail/article.html

Friday, March 26, 2010, 09:30
A mystery predator with a taste for ducks appears to lurking beneath the waters of a lake.A dog walker reported seeing a female duck flapping frantically before disappearing under the water at Stonebow Washlands, near Mount Grace Road, in Loughborough, on Monday. Minutes later the duck’s mate vanished without trace as the woman looked on.

Rumours of what might be behind the ducks’ disappearance range from pike to catfish or mink.

The dog walker said: “I saw two mallards and the female was flapping her wings. I thought she may be cleaning herself, but she was quite frantic and was going up and down. Next thing I knew she was gone.”I went over to have a closer look. “The male was still there and I was about 30 feet away watching him intently. I stood there for two or three minutes and then in a flash “All that was left on the water was a few feathers.”

Charnwood borough councillor and chairman of the Charnwood Wildlife Protection Group Roy Campsall said: “Whatever it is, it’s got to be a monster to take a fully grown duck. Pike are known to take ducklings, but I’ve never heard of anything taking a fully grown duck, especially two in the space of a few minutes.”

Former England international angler Stan Piecha, of Rearsby, said a pike would not take a duck because “their teeth go backwards and if they can’t swallow their prey in one go they will drown”.

Charnwood Borough Council wildlife development officer Mark Graham said there were no plans to hunt down the mystery predator

 

Amateur Leicestershire anglers trying to catch lake monster

Saturday, April 03, 2010, 09:30
Amateur anglers have been out in force trying to catch a mystery predator dubbed the Lough Ness Monster.Rumours of a duck-swallowing beast lurking below the waters of Stonebow Washlands, in Loughborough, have prompted dozens of youngsters to descend on the beauty spot with rods and nets.A dog-walker reported seeing two birds dragged under the surface of one of the lakes and it is believed they could have been gobbled up by a giant pike, some other fish or even a large turtle.Despite a ban on fishing at the Charnwood Borough Council-owned washlands, off Maxwell Drive, the beast has proved too tempting a prize for children.Chris Mullins, from Loughborough, the founder of exotic wildlife research organisation Beastwatch UK, has visited the washlands.

He said: “We still have no idea what it is. It is, of course, possible there is nothing out of the ordinary and what was seen was just ducks going under the water and resurfacing elsewhere.“It may be a big pike, or some other large fish such as a catfish.”Mr Mullins said it could also be a turtle. He said: “In the 90s, many of them were bought when there was the craze for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.“When they outgrew their tanks, many owners released them into the wild.“Snapping turtles can live 60 years and grow up to two feet. It’s possible they could take a duck. They could also take off a person’s finger, so its not a good idea to get too close.”Mr Mullins said he hoped to obtain the council’s permission to use an underwater camera to carry out a search.He said: “It may be a myth, or there may be something there but I think we need an answer either way.Nobody from the council was available to comment but wildlife development officer Mark Graham has previously said there were no plans to hunt the mystery predator.Dog-walker Richard Pearson, 40, who lives near the washlands, said: “I can understand why kids want to catch it but I bet they won’t.”(Source: Leicester Mercury – 3rd April 2010)http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/news/Amateur-Leicestershire-anglers-trying-catch-lake-monster/article-1967921-detail/article.html 

Further sighting of mysterious Cannock Chase Wolf
 
Feb 10 2010
 
Sunday Mercury
Sighting of a wolf-like creature over Cannock Chase have continued to flood in, with eyewitnesses claiming to have seen the fabled beast near to Huntington woodland.

Readers say they have spied a creature they believed to be a wolf near woodland off the Stafford Road.

The sightings follow a raft of eyewitness reports claiming to have seen the creature in undergrowth near Pottal Pool.

“I was walking my dog near to Broadhurst Green and I believe I saw something that could be described as a wolf,” resident Mark Sutton said.

“It was not a panther and it was too large to be a dog. It was walking through the bushes without a care in the world.

“It was about 50 metres away from us, but it didn’t seem fussed.

“It disappeared back into the Chase. I’m sure a lot of other people would have seen it. It wasn’t trying to stay hidden.”

Over the past 20 years, many people have claimed to have seen a big cat prowling Cannock Chase, fuelling speculation a panther roams the area.

But the recent sightings seem to suggest the fabled Chase Panther could belong to the wolf-family.

Last week resident Peter Derbyshire also said he saw a wolf-like creature while driving near Pottal Pool.

“I was driving through the trees in the direction of Stafford when I saw something dark moving amongst the bushes on the right hand side of the car,” he said.

“I slowed down to get a better look. It was probably about 80 metres away. It was aware I had slowed down, but did not seem too fussed. It disappeared into the bushes and I lost sight of it.

“It was definitely not a cat, it had more of a dog’s characteristics. It had a long nose and sharp, pointy ears.”

 2nd Feb 2010
Interview at above link on Real Player
A new group, called the Friends of the Wild Boar, has claimed the numbers of wild boar in the Forest could be so low that the boar may once again disappear entirely from the Forest of Dean.

 

Late last year, the Forestry Commission carried out a survey and came up with a tally of 90 rising to 150, but the group suggest numbers could be even lower.

Rob Guest, deputy surveyor for the Forest of Dean, said this attitude is “scaremongering” and doesn’t take into account the breeding season when sows at less than a year old can “drop up to 11 piglets”.

BBC Radio Gloucestershire’s Andy Vivian has been to meet the group.

Chasing the ThylacinePosted: 05 Feb 2010 11:23 AM PST

independent – On a bright summer morning in the back end of Tasmania’s north-west, I wandered into an office of Forestry Tasmania for advice about a forest dirt road. The sketch map the official offered was expected; not so his story. On that same track a decade or so ago, he had seen a creature that was not supposed to exist. And not just him; loggers and surveyors, an old-timer shacked up in the bush, all had glimpsed the animal before it slipped away into one of the most ancient rainforests on Earth.

Foresters are generally a practical bunch who measure life by certainties such as sawlogs and stray limbs lost to heavy machinery. When they swear to a sighting, you begin to wonder if there’s truth after all to the Tasmanian tiger.

There are really only two things you need to know about the world’s largest carnivorous marsupial. The first is that it looks nothing like its namesake except for the sandy orange coat and stripes that extend down to a stiff tail. The tiger – or thylacine as it is usually known because of its scientific name, Thylacinus cynocephalus, which means “pouched dog with a wolf’s head” – is an evolutionary concept-creature that bolts the back half of a kangaroo on to a rangy dog the size of an Alsatian. The second is that it has been extinct for seven decades. Or it has unless you ask around. Then it turns out they’re everywhere.

The first one I saw was in Hobart, the state capital. In the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, a small crowd gathered around footage of a restless creature in the city zoo with a slender snout that opened to a snake’s gape and a stiff gait that another believer later compared to a dairy cow. When “Benjamin” became history one chilly September night in 1936, he is thought to have taken the species with him.

Start to look, however, and a tiger will be there staring back at you. It gazed coolly from the label on my bottle of Cascade beer. It slinked into grass on the number plate of every car in front. And tigers rampant flanked the heraldic crest on state buildings – who needs unicorns when you have a home-grown fabulous beast?

No wonder tiger-hunters become obsessed. To the newcomer, Tasmania is the surprise of Australia. It is an island of hidden secrets in a nation of infinite space; a place where real-life devils utter banshee wails and moss-bearded giants stand silently in forests that predate mankind. In this Middle Earth of lost myths, a legendary tiger is just part of the scenery, and there’s a lot of that to cover in a state that’s one-quarter wilderness.

Many otherwise eminent people have suffered ridicule and nights cooped up in a chicken shed with a camera in their pursuit. The government’s Parks and Wildlife Service mounted its own two-year hunt in 1984 before it pronounced the species extinct and devoted its energies to finding feral foxes instead. That only upped the ante.

“Parks don’t want to say anything publicly to attract attention,” Ned Terry confided. We were drinking coffee in Deloraine in the state’s north, where farming villages were scattered over my map like seed and the landscapes are so vivid that the first pioneers christened their settlements Eden, Paradise and Promised Land. Hard to believe that the Alpine wilderness of Cradle Mountain lay an hour’s drive south. “The bush was full of tourists after a national park fellow reported a thylacine on the central east coast a few years ago. But those blokes got a lot of cameras out there to look for foxes. I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s some skulduggery going on.”

In this zoological X-Files, the 80-year-old bushman plays Mulder. Every couple of months he listens patiently to an excited witness, asks a few questions to weed out the fakers, then follows up whoever is left. His latest credible lead in half a lifetime’s tiger-chasing came from Lake Peddar in the south-west wilderness.

“Fellow camped out there says he heard one for three weekends in a row; that yapping noise they make when hunting. Says it ran so close he could smell it.”

Many witnesses mention the smell – a sharp, hot, animal stink that electrifies the air. “Smelled it myself once,” Terry said. “Makes the hairs on your neck stand on end, I can tell you.”

The truth is out there, somewhere. Probably (I dragged out of Terry) in the remote northern corners of the state. So, in the late afternoon I rolled east over swells of grass bound for Scottsdale. Every so often a timber farmhouse heaved aloft on a crest then vanished into the rear-view mirror. Beyond lay the high country of the north-east.

Around seven thylacine sightings a year, more than anywhere else in Tasmania, were made up there in the half-century after Hobart Zoo lost its star attraction. A few tiger-hunters still came to shoot blurry images, stalking the edge of old-growth rainforest that had barely changed since Tasmania ripped away from the global supercontinent of Gondwanaland.

In the pub I met a farmer who yarned about a wolfish head that had poked through the bracken fern. “When he comes out he sits up like a kangaroo, then starts sniffing the air like one. I thought: ‘What the hell’s that?'” A stray dog, perhaps, I suggested. “No dogs up there,” he bristled.

It turned out the area was swarming with rumours. Craig Williams, Tasmania’s premier wildlife guide and a fourth-generation bushman, kept up a rumble of anecdote and oath as we skirted the forest, stopping occasionally to practise an arcane element of bushcraft or stare after a furry backside that disappeared into the scrub. He indicated a farmstead as we swerved around one corner. “You know the last thylacine died in 1936? An old bloke shot one there in 1946. Said it was killing his chooks [chickens].”

Later, after a meal that belonged to a Sydney restaurant rather than a remote mountain shack, Craig told tiger tales around the campfire. There was the thylacine witnessed by four people on a logging road just over that ridge, and the waxy scat found late last year by the manager of a wilderness lodge. Or there was his mate whose car had broken down up here one night: “He said he heard these high-pitched yaps following him as he walked.”

Apparently Craig’s grandfather and great-grandfather used to trap thylacine on the mountain behind us. I tried and failed to reconcile the mysterious thylacine with the plantation forest that now striated its flanks. Could it really survive here?

As the sky deepened to a velvety black, Craig strobed the treeline with a torch. There were secrets as well as possum eyes in the dark spaces between eucalyptus trunks. Suddenly, at the edge of our clearing, something twitched. A stoat-like animal froze in the torch’s beam then skittered into the bush – a spotted-tailed quoll.

“Amazing killing machines; the ultimate predators,” Craig said with admiration. “They’re only a few kilos, but they can pull down a wallaby.” With jaws that opened to 90 degrees and overlapping teeth, it was a distant relation of the thylacine colloquially known as a tiger quoll. “Been quite a few tiger sightings by quite a few people made around here.”

I’d lost my bearings way back on the unmarked dirt roads. “Good,” said Craig. “I don’t want loads of people running around with traps and cameras. If the tiger’s up here, let him be. That’s what I reckon.” Another Tasmanian secret was safe.
____________________
Originally posted 7/4/07

Tasmanian Tiger: Not Extinct!


Australian wildlife scientists have re-opened the cryptic case of the Tasmanian tiger, a marsupial carnivore that resembled a striped coyote and which was last seen alive more than 70 years ago.

Scientists think chances are slim that Thylacinus cynocephalus still roams remote areas of Tasmania, the large island just south of Australia, but they can’t help but turn over every possible leaf for evidence.

The last wild Tasmanian tiger was killed by a farmer around 1930, and the last captive died in 1936 at the Hobart Zoo in Tasmania’s capital. Fifty years later, the species was declared extinct.

The extinction marked the end of the family Thylacinidae, and of the world’s largest marsupial carnivore. The Tasmanian tiger weighed about 65 pounds, had a nose-to-tail length of six feet and had several vertical stripes running across its lower back and tail.

Despite the official extinction, rumored sightings of the creature have continued to emerge from Tasmania’s temperate forests.

Zoologist Jeremy Austin of the Australian Center for Ancient DNA and his colleagues are examining DNA from animal droppings, or scats, found in Tasmania in the late 1950s and 1960s, which have been preserved in the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.

Eric Guiler, a thylacine expert who found the scats, told Austin the droppings probably came from a Tasmanian tiger rather than a dog or two common related marsupial carnivores — the well-known wolverine-like Tasmanian devil and the cat-like spotted quoll.

“If we find thylacine DNA from the 1950s scats it will be significant,” Austin said. “This would prove that either the thylacine produced the scat or a [Tasmanian] devil ate a thylacine and dropped the scat. Either way, that is proof that the thylacine was there at the time.”

If they were to find evidence the Tasmanian tiger was still extant in the 1950s, that would mean the beast was able to stay hidden from humans for at least 20 or 30 years.

“If they could survive this long with no real physical proof, then it does add a little more hope to the possibility that they could survive another 50 years without ever being caught, killed [or] hit by a car,” Austin told LiveScience. “This chance is of course not great, but the glimmer of hope is ever so slightly brighter.”

NOTE: The search for the thylacine has interested me for a long time. Here are a few links to other postings…Lon

On the Hunt for the Elusive Tasmanian Tiger

Are There Thylacines In Victoria?

Nick Mooney: We Still Receive at Least Two Credible Thylacine Sightings a Year

Thylacine DNA Restored To Life

New High-Tech Search For Thylacine, Large Cats After Recent Sheep Maulings

Resurrecting the Thylacine: Does it Exist or Will Science Help?

New Tasmanian Tiger Sighting Reported