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After 164 years of unchecked breeding, sika deer in Ireland could soon face the official “invasive species” tag from Brussels
After 164 years of unchecked breeding, sika deer in Ireland could soon face the official “invasive species” tag from Brussels. The European Commission is considering the classification, which could finally give stalkers the regulatory backing they have long called for.
Since their introduction to Ireland in 1860, sika deer populations have expanded dramatically. Today, they threaten native ecosystems, damage forestry operations, and create serious road safety risks.
Deer frequently cause agricultural damage and pose traffic hazards, with collisions often resulting in animals landing on car bonnets or forcing drivers to swerve dangerously.
Recent camera trap surveys in County Wicklow revealed the extent of the problem: sika deer accounted for 72% of 6,300 recorded wild mammal events across 220 square kilometres.
However, an official EU designation as an invasive species is not without complications.
Charles Smith-Jones of the British Deer Society warned that Northern Ireland’s continued alignment with EU environmental laws means that any invasive species classification would require “careful consideration of welfare safeguards, possible derogations, and cross-border coordination”.
Managing the species under new EU rules would mean balancing restrictions with humane culling practices and coordinated management between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.
But conservationists warn that without proper sika management, Ireland’s native woodlands could be lost altogether.
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