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From
BBC News
Posted: 2/27/01
Tuesday,
June 23, 1998 Published at 17:14 GMT 18:14 UK
UK Politics
Shoot the little
grey menace
A member
of the House of Lords has called for grey squirrels to be 'shot on sight'
in an effort to keep their numbers under control.
The call
followed a question from Lord Inglewood on the government's action plan
to protect red squirrels, whose numbers have declined as grey squirrels
have spread.
"We
must revert to a policy of shooting on sight," said Viscount Brookborough.
"I accept that we would not wipe them out, but where we are we have
found that the best way of control."
Speaking
for the government, Baroness Farrington of Ribbleton assured her noble
friend that the government was "fully committed to the conservation
of the red squirrel". But she was keen to point out that the "quick-fix"
solution outlined by Lord Inglewood was not the answer.
"I
cannot agree with the policy that is the indiscriminate shooting of any
wild animal, and I speak for myself as well as the government on this,"
said the Baroness.
"I
am very concious that the many parents with children who get enormous
pleasure taking their children to feed grey squirels would write to me
in their thousands were I to agree with the noble lord."
No
squirrel viagra
Baroness
Farrington outlined government plans for a sterilisation program for the
grey bushy-tailed menaces in order to keep their numbers at bay.
"What
we are doing is working, and hoping, through sponsoring via the Forestry
Commission, a project at Sheffield University, that within three years
of testing we may have developed a successful sterilisation project."
She stressed
red squirrels were a "priority species" for biodiversity action
plans and reassured the House that the government would continue to strive
for the red squirrel's long-term survival.
In response
to a question about red squirrels' predators, Baroness Farrington replied:
"I am not aware of any beasts that prey on red squirrels although
it does occur to me that there are those with two legs or guns who would
wish to do so."
Squirrel pie
The Countess
of Mar threw a culinary issue into the debate. Her concern was over a
long-lost wartime delicacy - squirrel pie. Could promoting the dish assist
in the quest to deplete numbers of the grey menaces?
Amid laughter
in the Lords, the Baroness replied: "I personally can see that squirrel
pie along with hedgehogs baked in earth are delicacies enjoyed by some
people and I am quite sure that if a cookery book writer were to find
a range of these recipies they would get invaluable assistance from the
Countess of Mar."
According
to Foresty commission figures, the red squirrel population in England
and Wales has declined by more than 75 per cent between 1959 and 1991.
Copyright
© 2002 SLM. All rights reserved.
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