SNH recommends cattle as an easier alternative to deer
Would you like to speak to our readers? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our audience. Find out more.report commissioned by Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) has suggested that a decline in deer numbers at Beinn Eighe, in Wester Ross, has led to areas of open woodland becoming too overgrown. The area, which is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, is an important habitat for scarce beetles, moths and butterflies, and the open woodland is a vital part of the habitat. As a result, the report has recommended that ?hardy beef cattle? should be allowed to graze on the site to keep down the plant life. According to the report, domestic livestock would be easier to manage than increasing the number of red deer in the area.
The grouse shooting debate reveals strong political support – some of it from perhaps surprising quarters – and a wider cultural divide
Stay alert to the symptoms of tick-borne infections suck as Lyme disease, warns Charles Smith-Jones