Post-Brexit government fails to protect nesting birds, rivers and hedgerowsRSPB says lack of action 'could have catastrophic impact upon iconic farmland species'As 2023 came to an end, rules that protected rivers and hedgerows expired. Now major charities are calling on the government to give basic protection to nature on farms.Until 31 December 2023, farmers were obliged to follow regulations, known as cross compliance, if they wanted to receive rural payments from the government. The cross compliance rules meant that farmers had to leave an unfarmed green buffer zone of two metres along watercourses. According to the government at the time, this was vital to "protect watercourses against pollution and run-off from agricultural sources by maintaining buffer strips." On top of this, the cross compliance regulations gave protection to hedgerows, which support a massive diversity of Britain's flora and fauna. The pre-Brexit rules ensured that farmers were obliged to "keep a green cover on land within two metres of the centre of a hedge." Farmers were also not allowed to apply fertilisers or pesticides to land within that two metres. There were also strict rules on the trimming of hedges. In order to protect nesting birds, farmers were previously not allowed to cut their hedges between 1 March and 31 August. There were also rigorous regulations on the removal of hedgerows. Protect the Wild has previously stated how important the UK's hedgerows are:
The government has 'ripped up important rules'The National Trust, Wildlife Trusts and RSPB released a press statement, arguing that immediate action needs to be taken "to fill the gaps left by these vital protections." Barnaby Coupe, Land Use Policy Manager of The Wildlife Trusts, stated:
Yellowhammer. Photo by Bob Brewer on UnsplashMeanwhile, RSPB England commented on the effects the lack of legislation would have on nesting birds. The charity's Head of Sustainable Land Use Policy, Alice Groom, stated:
Groom continued:
Farming lobby self-congratulates as usualThe farming lobby has reacted to this catastrophic news by posting a series of misleading and self-congratulating statements on social media, claiming for instance that farmers don't cut hedges during bird nesting season because of their love of wildlife. While some farmers clearly do their best for wildlife, there are innumerable reports of hedges being flailed in the spring (as well as early-growing grasses being cropped for silage just as ground-nesting birds like Skylarks are laying). The facts anyway are that there is no 'bird nesting season' as such (and birds are nesting earlier as the climate warms), and rather than agriculture going warm and fuzzy, the law protects nests: the Wildlife & Countryside Act makes it ILLEGAL 'to take or destroy a bird's eggs or nest, or damage a nest, while that nest is in use or being built' (for more information see our Protectors of the Wild page Nesting Birds, Nests, and the Law). The risk (admittedly remote given the lack of interest in wildlife crime) of being convicted of breaking the law is the more powerful incentive. We need a government that protects wildlifeBack in September 2023, Defra announced that it was holding a public consultation on hedgerows, and provided us all with an online questionnaire to fill out. It asked us ridiculous questions, such as whether the buffer zone around important hedgerows should be removed, or whether the period of the ‘cutting season’ should be shortened. Such questions made us cynical at Protect the Wild. Charlie Moores wrote at the time:
And now, the three charities have stated that:
Time and time again, this Tory government proves that it is not fit to protect our flora and fauna. In fact, Defra (the government department responsible for environmental protection in the UK) goes out of its way to destroy wildlife, whether it is by murdering the badger population, cosying up to the grouse shooting industry, or giving our wild birds zero protection against avian flu. This is, perhaps, unsurprising when there are two unelected trigger-happy ministers in Defra: one who will happily murder cormorants and goosanders for fishing industry profits, as well as lobby against the protection of raptors; and another who put wild birds at risk by approving the release of pheasant and partridges in Special Protection Areas. This government is wilfully causing immense suffering to Britain's wildlife and clearly can not be trusted to protect it. We urgently need to get pro-wildlife ministers in power before it is too late.
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Tuesday, 23 January 2024
TAKE HEED OF WHAT R.S.P.B. ADE SAYING.FROM PROTECT THE WILD
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