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Saving the red squirrel

 

Source >

http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article356794.ece

With their tufty ears and bushy tails, red squirrels

beat their grey cousins in the beauty stakes - but are

losing the battle for England's forests. Could a mass

cull of greys save this English icon from extinction?

Sanjida O'Connell reports

Published: 10 April 2006

 

These days, a glimpse of a red squirrel is a rare

treat. Numbers have declined so much that it is

thought they could be extinct in the UK within 20

years, and a cull of grey squirrels has been announced

to help protect the red's declining numbers. It's a

policy that has divided environmentalists and nature

lovers all over Britain. The biodiversity minister,

Jim Knight, says: " Many people love grey squirrels,

but the reality is that they are a real problem for

some of our most threatened native species. "

 

There are thought to be more than 2 million grey

squirrels, which outnumber the reds by 66 to one. In a

departure from normal planting methods, the Forestry

Commission is not going to grow any more oak trees in

Europe's biggest managed conifer forest after computer

modelling carried out by Newcastle University and

Queen Mary and Westfield College, London, shows how

the grey squirrel is pushing the red to the brink of

extinction.

 

The red squirrel migrated to Britain 10,000 years ago

during the last Ice Age. Since the grey was brought

over from America in the 19th century, the red has

steadily declined. Explanations for this range from

mating with the reds to produce infertile offspring to

aggression. " These theories have been discounted, "

says Dr Peter Lurz, part of the team at Newcastle.

" The greys don't beat up the reds. The two species

ignore each other. And there is no influence on

mating. "

 

Research has shown that the main impact is during the

juvenile stage. If reds live in an area that becomes

infiltrated by greys, they normally disappear after

about two years as the adults die and young reds are

unable to colonise the area. One reason is because the

grey is well suited to this country: they prefer

broad-leafed trees, like oak, since they are similar

to their native hickory habitat, and are better able

to digest tannins in seeds like acorns. In contrast,

the reds are better adapted to conifer forests

containing trees like the Scots pine.

 

The reds have been reduced to between 20,000 and

30,000 animals in southern Britain. About 4,000 are

found in small pockets in Wales, Thetford Forest in

East Anglia and islands off the South Coast, such as

the Isle of Wight. The only large remaining area

suitable for red squirrels, which contains the

remainder of the species, is Kielder Forest in

Northumberland and north Cumbria. However, grey

squirrels are encroaching from the north, from the

Border Counties as well as from the south. Kielder

Forest, which spreads across 50,000 hectares, is

likely to be one of the last strongholds of the red

squirrel in England.

 

If the reds only faced competition for food at the

juvenile stage, it is unlikely they would be at such a

critical junction. Back in the late Seventies Dr

Jonathan Reynolds, now a research scientist at the

Game Conservancy Trust in Hampshire, was studying red

squirrels at Thetford Forest, in an attempt to

understand why the species was faring badly. He

concentrated on their feeding behaviour: greys are 60

per cent bigger than reds and he thought this might

increase the competition for food. His study

population kept dying of a myxomatosis-like disease

yet there was nothing obviously wrong with the

animals. Dr Reynolds supplied carcasses to Norwich

University's Veterinary Investigation Centre. After 20

routine post-mortems had been carried out, the vets

realised that this was a far more complex situation

and sent the next batch to Maff (now Defra), whose

scientists discovered that the squirrels were infested

with an unknown virus.

 

After 20 years we now know that the grey harbours the

parapox virus, which is benign to this species. " It is

most likely that the grey squirrels brought the virus

with them from the US, " says Tony Sainsbury, from the

Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London. It

is possible that the virus is carried by fleas that

live on the grey, which red squirrels pick up when

they use the dreys, or nests. What we do know is that

the virus acts swiftly - within 15 days, reds suffer

from inflamed skin around their eyes and toes that

develop into lesions. The disease is almost invariably

fatal, although no one knows if the virus kills them

or if they die of hunger and a low immunity.

 

Recent research by the Newcastle and London team has

highlighted the interplay between disease and food

competition. In places such as Italy and Scotland

where the greys don't have the virus, the reds

decreased by about 4 sq km a year. In Norfolk and

Cumbria, where the greys are disease-carriers, the

reds retreated at a rate of 90 sq km a year. As a

result of this work, Dr Lurz and Professor John

Gurnell from Queen Mary College, London, suggested

that the Forestry Commission should manage Kielder

Forest in a pro-red squirrel way. Previous plans to

plant corridors of oak trees would be the equivalent

of building motorways along which grey squirrels would

migrate to wipe out the native species. The Forestry

Commission will continue with some native woodland

planting though, as well as " squirrel-neutral " species

such as birch, rowan and willow.

 

Unfortunately, Dr Reynolds is not convinced that this

will work. " You have to take into account the size of

the army of reds and greys. The advancing greys may be

existing on a sub-optimal diet but this doesn't matter

because they will be replaced by an army that keeps on

coming. The reds, even eating an optimal diet of Scots

pine, will be undermined by disease and will

disappear. "

 

Dr Reynolds ended up charting the demise of the red

and the infiltration of the greys for his PhD. Dr Lurz

used this data, as well as satellite imagery of ranges

linked to the forest's new design plans, plus 10

years' worth of research on radio-tracked squirrels.

The team used this information to help them model the

potential spread of the disease as the greys invade

Kielder forest. They have shown that if the greys

invade, as they surely will, they will march on

Kielder using four wooded routes into the forest.

" There will be local extinctions, " says Dr Lurz,

" Hundreds of reds will die. "

 

Dr Lurz doesn't think it will be the death of the

species though - because the greys can only access

Kielder along these four highways, there is some hope

that overall the reds might be able to survive. If his

theory is correct, the reds will become infected as

they make contact with the greys, and will infect

their neighbours, all of whom will die. But assuming

that the squirrels die within two weeks and do not

travel far during this period, it is unlikely they

will infect more squirrels than those in their

immediate home ranges. " Overall it's a positive

message, " says Dr Lurz.

 

It doesn't sound like one. The Government has now

suggested that greys should be culled in and around

sensitive areas, such as Kielder; the greys would be

exterminated by being shot or poisoned. Dr Lurz does

not support a cull himself, saying, " I personally feel

that one cannot carry out this kind of control over

five to 10 years. "

 

The European Squirrel Initiative is in favour of the

cull but its spokesman, Andrew Kendall, says, " Our

view is that this is not a sustainable objective. No

matter how hard you try, the greys will get through

your defences; culling will only buy you time to

safeguard the squirrel gene pool. " Instead, the ESI is

in favour of developing a species-specific

contraceptive. Dr Reynolds is sceptical, pointing out

that Australia has spent millions of dollars

attempting to create fertility control for rabbits.

Not only have the Australians not managed, but none of

the chemicals developed would pass environmental

health standards. " I think we need to know a lot more

about this disease, " says Dr Reynolds. " We need to

have a test for it, we need to be able to screen

populations, which will change management plans, and

we have to hope that a vaccine will be developed. "

 

Others have put their faith in captive breeding

programmes, such as the one at Kelling Heath, Norfolk,

which is part of the national breeding programme. The

Independent has previously reported research by Dr

Lurz, which showed that a new strain of Cumbrian red

squirrel had been detected. At the time, Dr Lurz said

that this strain should be included in the programme,

adding, " A captive breeding programme needs to be

introduced as an additional conservation measure, just

in case the conservation programme does not work. This

will guarantee these unique animals are not lost

forever. "

 

Unfortunately, there is no chance that any of the red

squirrels, Cumbrian or otherwise, could currently be

released on mainland Britain as they would succumb to

the virus. Although Dr Reynolds thinks the situation

is " pretty bleak " , Professor Gurnell is more positive:

" I'm optimistic that in some places, such as the north

of England and Scotland, red squirrels will persist. "

 

Sanjida O'Connell is the author of 'Sugar: The Grass

that Changed the World' (Virgin Books, £8.99)

 

These days, a glimpse of a red squirrel is a rare

treat. Numbers have declined so much that it is

thought they could be extinct in the UK within 20

years, and a cull of grey squirrels has been announced

to help protect the red's declining numbers. It's a

policy that has divided environmentalists and nature

lovers all over Britain. The biodiversity minister,

Jim Knight, says: " Many people love grey squirrels,

but the reality is that they are a real problem for

some of our most threatened native species. "

 

There are thought to be more than 2 million grey

squirrels, which outnumber the reds by 66 to one. In a

departure from normal planting methods, the Forestry

Commission is not going to grow any more oak trees in

Europe's biggest managed conifer forest after computer

modelling carried out by Newcastle University and

Queen Mary and Westfield College, London, shows how

the grey squirrel is pushing the red to the brink of

extinction.

 

The red squirrel migrated to Britain 10,000 years ago

during the last Ice Age. Since the grey was brought

over from America in the 19th century, the red has

steadily declined. Explanations for this range from

mating with the reds to produce infertile offspring to

aggression. " These theories have been discounted, "

says Dr Peter Lurz, part of the team at Newcastle.

" The greys don't beat up the reds. The two species

ignore each other. And there is no influence on

mating. "

 

Research has shown that the main impact is during the

juvenile stage. If reds live in an area that becomes

infiltrated by greys, they normally disappear after

about two years as the adults die and young reds are

unable to colonise the area. One reason is because the

grey is well suited to this country: they prefer

broad-leafed trees, like oak, since they are similar

to their native hickory habitat, and are better able

to digest tannins in seeds like acorns. In contrast,

the reds are better adapted to conifer forests

containing trees like the Scots pine.

 

The reds have been reduced to between 20,000 and

30,000 animals in southern Britain. About 4,000 are

found in small pockets in Wales, Thetford Forest in

East Anglia and islands off the South Coast, such as

the Isle of Wight. The only large remaining area

suitable for red squirrels, which contains the

remainder of the species, is Kielder Forest in

Northumberland and north Cumbria. However, grey

squirrels are encroaching from the north, from the

Border Counties as well as from the south. Kielder

Forest, which spreads across 50,000 hectares, is

likely to be one of the last strongholds of the red

squirrel in England.

 

If the reds only faced competition for food at the

juvenile stage, it is unlikely they would be at such a

critical junction. Back in the late Seventies Dr

Jonathan Reynolds, now a research scientist at the

Game Conservancy Trust in Hampshire, was studying red

squirrels at Thetford Forest, in an attempt to

understand why the species was faring badly. He

concentrated on their feeding behaviour: greys are 60

per cent bigger than reds and he thought this might

increase the competition for food. His study

population kept dying of a myxomatosis-like disease

yet there was nothing obviously wrong with the

animals. Dr Reynolds supplied carcasses to Norwich

University's Veterinary Investigation Centre. After 20

routine post-mortems had been carried out, the vets

realised that this was a far more complex situation

and sent the next batch to Maff (now Defra), whose

scientists discovered that the squirrels were infested

with an unknown virus.

 

After 20 years we now know that the grey harbours the

parapox virus, which is benign to this species. " It is

most likely that the grey squirrels brought the virus

with them from the US, " says Tony Sainsbury, from the

Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London. It

is possible that the virus is carried by fleas that

live on the grey, which red squirrels pick up when

they use the dreys, or nests. What we do know is that

the virus acts swiftly - within 15 days, reds suffer

from inflamed skin around their eyes and toes that

develop into lesions. The disease is almost invariably

fatal, although no one knows if the virus kills them

or if they die of hunger and a low immunity.

 

Recent research by the Newcastle and London team has

highlighted the interplay between disease and food

competition. In places such as Italy and Scotland

where the greys don't have the virus, the reds

decreased by about 4 sq km a year. In Norfolk and

Cumbria, where the greys are disease-carriers, the

reds retreated at a rate of 90 sq km a year. As a

result of this work, Dr Lurz and Professor John

Gurnell from Queen Mary College, London, suggested

that the Forestry Commission should manage Kielder

Forest in a pro-red squirrel way. Previous plans to

plant corridors of oak trees would be the equivalent

of building motorways along which grey squirrels would

migrate to wipe out the native species. The Forestry

Commission will continue with some native woodland

planting though, as well as " squirrel-neutral " species

such as birch, rowan and willow.

 

Unfortunately, Dr Reynolds is not convinced that this

will work. " You have to take into account the size of

the army of reds and greys. The advancing greys may be

existing on a sub-optimal diet but this doesn't matter

because they will be replaced by an army that keeps on

coming. The reds, even eating an optimal diet of Scots

pine, will be undermined by disease and will

disappear. "

 

Dr Reynolds ended up charting the demise of the red

and the infiltration of the greys for his PhD. Dr Lurz

used this data, as well as satellite imagery of ranges

linked to the forest's new design plans, plus 10

years' worth of research on radio-tracked squirrels.

The team used this information to help them model the

potential spread of the disease as the greys invade

Kielder forest. They have shown that if the greys

invade, as they surely will, they will march on

Kielder using four wooded routes into the forest.

" There will be local extinctions, " says Dr Lurz,

" Hundreds of reds will die. "

 

Dr Lurz doesn't think it will be the death of the

species though - because the greys can only access

Kielder along these four highways, there is some hope

that overall the reds might be able to survive. If his

theory is correct, the reds will become infected as

they make contact with the greys, and will infect

their neighbours, all of whom will die. But assuming

that the squirrels die within two weeks and do not

travel far during this period, it is unlikely they

will infect more squirrels than those in their

immediate home ranges. " Overall it's a positive

message, " says Dr Lurz.

 

It doesn't sound like one. The Government has now

suggested that greys should be culled in and around

sensitive areas, such as Kielder; the greys would be

exterminated by being shot or poisoned. Dr Lurz does

not support a cull himself, saying, " I personally feel

that one cannot carry out this kind of control over

five to 10 years. "

 

The European Squirrel Initiative is in favour of the

cull but its spokesman, Andrew Kendall, says, " Our

view is that this is not a sustainable objective. No

matter how hard you try, the greys will get through

your defences; culling will only buy you time to

safeguard the squirrel gene pool. " Instead, the ESI is

in favour of developing a species-specific

contraceptive. Dr Reynolds is sceptical, pointing out

that Australia has spent millions of dollars

attempting to create fertility control for rabbits.

Not only have the Australians not managed, but none of

the chemicals developed would pass environmental

health standards. " I think we need to know a lot more

about this disease, " says Dr Reynolds. " We need to

have a test for it, we need to be able to screen

populations, which will change management plans, and

we have to hope that a vaccine will be developed. "

 

Others have put their faith in captive breeding

programmes, such as the one at Kelling Heath, Norfolk,

which is part of the national breeding programme. The

Independent has previously reported research by Dr

Lurz, which showed that a new strain of Cumbrian red

squirrel had been detected. At the time, Dr Lurz said

that this strain should be included in the programme,

adding, " A captive breeding programme needs to be

introduced as an additional conservation measure, just

in case the conservation programme does not work. This

will guarantee these unique animals are not lost

forever. "

 

Unfortunately, there is no chance that any of the red

squirrels, Cumbrian or otherwise, could currently be

released on mainland Britain as they would succumb to

the virus. Although Dr Reynolds thinks the situation

is " pretty bleak " , Professor Gurnell is more positive:

" I'm optimistic that in some places, such as the north

of England and Scotland, red squirrels will persist. "

 

Sanjida O'Connell is the author of 'Sugar: The Grass

that Changed the World' (Virgin Books, £8.99)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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